hill$35232$ - traduzione in greco
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  • etimologia

hill$35232$ - traduzione in greco

HILL IN UNITED KINGDOM
Hill hill hill hill; Hillhillhill Hill; Torpenhow hill

hill      
n. λόφος
hill climbing         
  • Despite the many local maxima in this graph, the global maximum can still be found using simulated annealing. Unfortunately, the applicability of simulated annealing is problem-specific because it relies on finding ''lucky jumps'' that improve the position. In such extreme examples, hill climbing will most probably produce a local maximum.
OPTIMIZATION ALGORITHM
Random-restart hill climbing; Hill-climbing; Hill-climbing algorithm; Hill-climbing optimization; Shotgun hill climbing; Random hill climbing; Hill climbing algorithm; Hill climbing method
ανάβαση λόφου
sand hill         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Sand Hill (disambiguation)
n. αμμόλοφος

Definizione

molehill
(molehills)
1.
A molehill is a small pile of earth made by a mole digging a tunnel.
N-COUNT
2.
If you say that someone is making a mountain out of a molehill, you are critical of them for making an unimportant fact or difficulty seem like a serious one.
The British press, making a mountain out of a molehill, precipitated an unnecessary economic crisis.
PHRASE: V and Ns inflect [disapproval]

Wikipedia

Torpenhow Hill

Torpenhow Hill (locally , trə-PEN) is claimed to be the name of a hill near the village of Torpenhow in Cumbria, England, a name that is tautological. According to an analysis by linguist Darryl Francis and locals, there is no landform formally known as Torpenhow Hill there, either officially or locally, which would make the term an example of a ghost word.

A.D. Mills in his Dictionary of English Place-Names interprets the name as "Ridge of the hill with a rocky peak", giving its etymology as Old English torr, Celtic *penn, and Old English hoh.

In 1688, Thomas Denton stated that Torpenhow Hall and church stand on a 'rising topped hill', which he assumed might have been the source of the name of the village. Denton apparently exaggerated the example to a "Torpenhow Hill", which would quadruple the "hill" element, but the existence of a toponym "Torpenhow Hill" is not substantiated.

In 1884, G.L. Fenton proposed the name as an example of "quadruple redundancy" in tautological placename etymologies, i.e. that all four elements of the name might mean "hill". It was used as a convenient example for the nature of loanword adoption by Thomas Comber in c. 1880.