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ODE (other)
An ode is a form of stately and elaborate lyrical verse. Ode may also refer to: Arts Music * ''Ode'' (Brad Mehldau album) * ''Ode'' (London Jazz Composers' Orchestra album) * ''Ode'' (Stravinsky), an orchestral work by Igor Stravinsky (1943) and a ballet to its music by Lorca Massine (1972) * Ode Records, an American record label * Ode Records (New Zealand), a New Zealand record label * '' An Ode'', a 2019 album by South Korean boy band Seventeen * "Ode", a song by Soul Asylum from their 1988 album ''Hang Time'' * "Ode", a song by Creed from their 1997 album ''My Own Prison'' * "Ode", a song by Mono from their 2004 album '' Walking Cloud and Deep Red Sky, Flag Fluttered and the Sun Shined'' Other arts * ''Ode'' (Nabokov), a ballet by Nicolas Nabokov and Léonide Massine (Ballets Russes, 1928) * "Ode" (poem), a poem by Arthur O'Shaughnessy * ''The Ode'', a 2008 film by Nilanjan Neil Lahiri (sometimes just ''Ode'') * ''Ode'', a 2017 film from Nathaniel Dorsky's Arboretum Cyc ...
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Ode (Brad Mehldau Album)
''Ode'' is a contemporary jazz album by American pianist Brad Mehldau. It features Mehldau's regular trio partners, bassist Larry Grenadier and drummer Jeff Ballard. The album was released on March 20, 2012 by Nonesuch Records. Reception The album received universal acclaim with Metacritic giving it a score of 85% from 10 reviews. AllMusic awarded the album 4 stars and in its review by Thom Jurek, states "As an album, ''Ode'' reveals just how far this group has traveled together these past seven years. More importantly, it provides an exciting glimpse of what may lie on their collective horizon". ''PopMatters'' reviewer Will Layman said "''Ode'' itself does not reach for epic dimension often, and that’s cool. It seems less like a manifesto or a film than like a very fine jazz album. Though the leading jazz pianists today are making lots of impressive statements about where the music is going, maybe creating a compelling album, old school, is still one of the music's clearest ca ...
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Omicron Delta Epsilon
Omicron Delta Epsilon ( or ODE) is an international honor society in the field of economics, formed from the merger of Omicron Delta Gamma and Omicron Chi Epsilon, in 1963. Its board of trustees includes well-known economists such as Robert Lucas, Paul Romer, and Robert Solow. ODE is a member of the Association of College Honor Societies; the ACHS indicates that ODE inducts approximately 4,000 collegiate members each year and has more than 100,000 living lifetime members. There are approximately 700 active ODE chapters worldwide. New members consist of undergraduate and graduate students, as well as college and university faculty; the academic achievement required to obtain membership for students can be raised by individual chapters, as well as the ability to run for office or wear honors cords during graduation. It publishes an academic journal entitled ''The American Economist'' twice each year. History The first national honor society in economics, Omicron Delta Gamma (OD ...
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Oder (other)
The Oder is a river in Central Europe. Oder or ''variation'', may also refer to: * Glenn Oder (born 1957), U.S. politician * Tjaša Oder (born 1994), Slovenian swimmer * Oder Dam, a dam in Germany on the river Oder * Oder Lagoon, Baltic Sea; in Germany and Poland * Oder (Harz), Lower Saxony, Germany; a river * Oder Valley Railway, Germany * Overdoser (ODer), someone who has had a drug overdose * Online dater (ODer), someone participating in online dating * Oder, someone who composes odes See also * Odour/Odor * * Ode (other) * Odes (other) * OD (other) * Odor (other) Odor or odour, aroma, smell, scent, are things detected by the olfactory system Odor or ''odour'', may refer to: * Odor (surname) or ''Ódor'' or ''O'Dor'' * Odor Pond, Herkimer County, New York State, USA; a pond See also * * * ODEUR * O ...
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Odes (other)
Odes may refer to: *The plural of ode, a type of poem * ''Odes'' (Horace), a collection of poems by the Roman author Horace, circa 23 BCE * Odes of Solomon, a pseudepigraphic book of the Bible * Book of Odes (Bible), a Deuterocanonical book of the Bible * Odes (Irene Papas album) * Odes (The Flowers of Hell album) *''Odes'', Victor Hugo's second poetry book *'' Classic of Poetry'', a book from ancient China that has been translated as ''Odes'' *ODEs may be an abbreviation for ordinary differential equations * Odic force *"-odes", a suffix used in taxonomy See also * * OD (other) * ODS (other) * ODE (other) * Ode (other) [Baidu]  


ODE (other)
An ode is a form of stately and elaborate lyrical verse. Ode may also refer to: Arts Music * ''Ode'' (Brad Mehldau album) * ''Ode'' (London Jazz Composers' Orchestra album) * ''Ode'' (Stravinsky), an orchestral work by Igor Stravinsky (1943) and a ballet to its music by Lorca Massine (1972) * Ode Records, an American record label * Ode Records (New Zealand), a New Zealand record label * '' An Ode'', a 2019 album by South Korean boy band Seventeen * "Ode", a song by Soul Asylum from their 1988 album ''Hang Time'' * "Ode", a song by Creed from their 1997 album ''My Own Prison'' * "Ode", a song by Mono from their 2004 album '' Walking Cloud and Deep Red Sky, Flag Fluttered and the Sun Shined'' Other arts * ''Ode'' (Nabokov), a ballet by Nicolas Nabokov and Léonide Massine (Ballets Russes, 1928) * "Ode" (poem), a poem by Arthur O'Shaughnessy * ''The Ode'', a 2008 film by Nilanjan Neil Lahiri (sometimes just ''Ode'') * ''Ode'', a 2017 film from Nathaniel Dorsky's Arboretum Cyc ...
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Canon (hymnography)
A canon ( el, κανών, kanōn) is a structured hymn used in a number of Eastern Orthodox services. It consists of nine ''odes'', based on the Biblical canticles. Most of these are found in the Old Testament, but the final ode is taken from the Magnificat and Song of Zechariah from the New Testament. The canon dates from the 7th century and was either devised or introduced into the Greek language by St. Andrew of Crete, whose penitential ''Great Canon'' is still used on certain occasions during Great Lent. It was further developed in the 8th century by Sts. John of Damascus and Cosmas of Jerusalem, and in the 9th century by Sts. Joseph the Hymnographer and Theophanes the Branded. Over time the canon came to replace the , a vestigial form of which is still used on several occasions and which has been incorporated into the performance of the canon. Each canon develops a specific theme, such as repentance or honouring a particular saint. Sometimes more than one canon ca ...
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Ode To Aphrodite
The Ode to Aphrodite (or Sappho fragment 1) is a lyric poem by the archaic Greek poet Sappho, who wrote in the late seventh and early sixth centuries BCE, in which the speaker calls on the help of Aphrodite in the pursuit of a beloved. The poem survives in almost complete form, with only two places of uncertainty in the text, preserved through a quotation from Dionysius of Halicarnassus' treatise ''On Composition'' and in fragmentary form in a scrap of papyrus discovered at Oxyrhynchus in Egypt. The Ode to Aphrodite comprises seven Sapphic stanzas. It begins with an invocation of the goddess Aphrodite, which is followed by a narrative section in which the speaker describes a previous occasion on which the goddess has helped her. The poem ends with an appeal to Aphrodite to once again come to the speaker's aid. The seriousness with which Sappho intended the poem is disputed, though at least parts of the work appear to be intentionally humorous. The poem makes use of Homeric langua ...
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Ode, Gujarat
Ode is a small town and a municipality in Anand district in the Indian state of Gujarat. Location and transport Ode is located at in western India at an elevation of , approximately north-east of the centre of Anand. Ode railway station, which is about north of Ode village on the Western Railway's Anand–Godhra railway line. Ode is about north-east of the Ahmedabad–Vadodara Expressway, and about from Vadodara Airport. Ode is served by the Gujarat state transport system providing bus services to major cities and surrounding villages. Ode has many temples including Ranchhodji's Mandir, Swaminarayan Mandirs (Old, New), Ram Mandir, Lord Shiva Mandir, Vaishnav Mandir, Jain Derasar Pranami Mandir and many others. Temples Ode has many temples including Ranchhodji's Mandir, Swaminarayan Mandirs (Old, New), Ram Mandir, Shiv Mandirs, Vaishnav Mandir, Jain Derasar Pranami Mandir and many others. History Ode was known in ancient times as Pranavpur. In former prosperous times, ...
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Odic Force
The Odic force (also called Od �d Odyle, Önd, Odes, Odylic, Odyllic, or Odems) is the name given in the mid-19th century to a hypothetical vital energy or life force by Baron Carl von Reichenbach. Von Reichenbach coined the name from that of the Germanic god Odin in 1845. History As von Reichenbach was investigating the manner in which the human nervous system could be affected by various substances, he conceived the existence of a new force allied to electricity, magnetism, and heat, a force which he thought was radiated by most substances, and to the influence of which different people are variously sensitive. He named this vitalist concept ''Odic force''. Proponents say that Odic force permeates all plants, animals, and humans. Believers in Odic force said that it is visible in total darkness as colored auras surrounding living things, crystals, and magnets, but that viewing it requires hours first spent in total darkness, and only very sensitive people have the abi ...
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Open Software Foundation
The Open Software Foundation (OSF) was a not-for-profit industry consortium for creating an open standard for an implementation of the operating system Unix. It was formed in 1988 and merged with X/Open in 1996, to become The Open Group. Despite the similarities in name, OSF was unrelated to the Free Software Foundation (FSF, also based in Cambridge, Massachusetts), or the Open Source Initiative (OSI). History The organization was first proposed by Armando Stettner of Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) at an invitation-only meeting hosted by DEC for several Unix system vendors in January 1988 (called the "Hamilton Group", since the meeting was held at DEC's offices on Palo Alto's Hamilton Avenue). It was intended as an organization for joint development, mostly in response to a perceived threat of "merged UNIX system" efforts by AT&T Corporation and Sun Microsystems. After discussion during the meeting, the proposal was tabled so that members of the Hamilton Group could broach ...
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Apache ODE
Apache ODE (Apache Orchestration Director Engine) is a software coded in Java as a workflow engine to manage business processes which have been expressed in the Web Services Business Process Execution Language ( WS-BPEL) via a website. It was made by the Apache Software Foundation and released in a stable format on March 23, 2018. The software principally communicates with one or more Web services, sending and receiving messages, manipulating data and handling exceptions (errors) as defined by any given process. The engine is capable of running both long and short living processes to coordinate all the services that make up a service or application (orchestration). As of August 2019, development of the software has been discontinued, and the project has been moved into the Apache Attic. Communication WS-BPEL itself is based upon the XML language and includes a number of ways in which business processes can be expressed. These include conditional clauses, repeating loops, cal ...
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Ordinary Differential Equation
In mathematics, an ordinary differential equation (ODE) is a differential equation whose unknown(s) consists of one (or more) function(s) of one variable and involves the derivatives of those functions. The term ''ordinary'' is used in contrast with the term partial differential equation which may be with respect to ''more than'' one independent variable. Differential equations A linear differential equation is a differential equation that is defined by a linear polynomial in the unknown function and its derivatives, that is an equation of the form :a_0(x)y +a_1(x)y' + a_2(x)y'' +\cdots +a_n(x)y^+b(x)=0, where , ..., and are arbitrary differentiable functions that do not need to be linear, and are the successive derivatives of the unknown function of the variable . Among ordinary differential equations, linear differential equations play a prominent role for several reasons. Most elementary and special functions that are encountered in physics and applied mathem ...
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