copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
orthography - Real time, real-time or realtime - English Language . . . As to "realtime": As words are commonly paired together, they tend to be spelled as one word eventually "Realtime" isn't a word in any dictionary I can find, but it does get used in slang and in names American dictionaries tend to list these combination words before UK dictionaries In other words, we'll see "realtime" in more dictionaries
What is the correct title for someone who gives podcasts? To avoid a term suggestive of "iPod", some use the term netcast instead of podcast, such as the TWiT tv podcaster Leo Laporte (though the older term is also used in the broader sense of any internet-delivered realtime media transmission) Although netcaster sounds like someone who works on a fishing trawler
orthography - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Very nice! Methinks you have unearthed a compound word in the making I did a narrowly-focused (1995-2005) Google lit search for both time point and timepoint, and learned both terms seem to be found most often in technical writing − often describing scientific, statistically-driven experiments
Timestep, time step, time-step: Which variant to use? I am writing a piece on integration of differential equations One of the words that I have to use frequently is "timestep" (however it is written), i e a step forward in the "simulated" time