Glasgow$31756$ - translation to English
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Glasgow$31756$ - translation to English

ART MOVEMENT PART OF ART NOUVEAU IN GLASGOW, SCOTLAND
Glasgow Boys; Glasgow Four; Glasgow Style; Spook School; The Glasgow Boys; Glasgow school; Glasgow Girls (artists)
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  • Glasgow School of Art

Glasgow      
n. Glasgow (een stad in schotland)
Glasgow Rangers         
  • The Ibrox Disaster memorial statue, commemorating the 1971 tragedy along with previous disasters
  • Celtic]] in 2004.
  • Card display at Ibrox to welcome Paul Le Guen
  • The 1877 Scottish Cup Final Rangers team
  • Manchester]] which Rangers contested.
ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL CLUB IN GLASGOW, SCOTLAND
Glasgow Rangers F.C.; Rangers FC; Rangers Football Club; Rangers fc; Broxi Bear; Rangers F.C; The Gers; Glasgow Rangers FC; Glasgow Rangers Football Club; Rangers F C; Rangers F. C.; Rangers (Glasgow); Glasgow Rangers; The Rangers F.C.; Rangers F.C. (2012); Rangers F.C. (1872); Rangers (1873); The Rangers FC; The rangers 2012; FC Rangers
Glasgow Rangers (schotse voetbalvereniging)

Definition

Glasgow Haskell Compiler
<language> (GHC) A Haskell 1.2 compiler written in Haskell by the AQUA project at Glasgow University, headed by Simon Peyton Jones <simonpj@dcs.glasgow.ac.uk> throughout the 1990's [started?]. GHC can generate either C or native code for SPARC, DEC Alpha and other platforms. It can take advantage of features of gcc such as global register variables and has an extensive set of optimisations. GHC features an extensible I/O system based on a "monad", in-line C code, fully fledged unboxed data types, incrementally-updatable arrays, mutable reference types, generational garbage collector, concurrent threads. Time and space profiling is also supported. It requires GNU gcc 2.1+ and Perl. GHC runs on Sun-4, DEC Alpha, Sun-3, NeXT, DECstation, HP-PA and SGI. Latest version: 4.01, as of 1998-11-30. {Glasgow FTP (ftp://ftp.dcs.glasgow.ac.uk/pub/haskell/glasgow/)}. {Yale (ftp://nebula.cs.yale.edu/pub/haskell/glasgow/)}. {Sweden (ftp://ftp.cs.chalmers.se/pub/haskell/glasgow/)}. Papers (ftp://ftp.dcs.glasgow.ac.uk/pub/glasgow-fp). ["Imperative functional programming", Peyton Jones & Wadler, POPL '93]. ["Unboxed data types as first-class citizens", Peyton Jones & Launchbury, FPCA '91]. ["Profiling lazy functional languages", Sansom & Peyton Jones, Glasgow workshop '92]. ["Implementing lazy functional languages on stock hardware", Peyton Jones, Journal of Functional Programming, Apr 1992]. E-mail: <glasgow-haskell-request@dcs.glasgow.ac.uk>. (1999-01-05)

Wikipedia

Glasgow School

The Glasgow School was a circle of influential artists and designers that began to coalesce in Glasgow, Scotland in the 1870s, and flourished from the 1890s to around 1910. Representative groups included The Four (also known as the Spook School), the Glasgow Girls and the Glasgow Boys. Part of the international Art Nouveau movement, they were responsible for creating the distinctive Glasgow Style (see Modern Style (British Art Nouveau style)).

Glasgow experienced an economic boom at the end of the 19th century, resulting in an increase in distinctive contributions to the Art Nouveau movement, particularly in the fields of architecture, interior design and painting.