compound event - definitie. Wat is compound event
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Wat (wie) is compound event - definitie

IN STATISTICS AND PROBABILITY THEORY, SET OF OUTCOMES TO WHICH A PROBABILITY IS ASSIGNED
Probability/Event; Random event; Stochastic event; Event (probability); Event (statistics); Event probability

Compound (linguistics)         
  • Sewage-treatment-facility - The German language has many compounds.
LEXEME THAT CONSISTS OF MORE THAN ONE STEM
Nominal compound; Compound noun and adjective; Compound word; Compound noun, adjective and verb; Compound words; Nominal composition; Noun compound; Word-compounding; Compound nouns; Compound nominal phrase; Compound preposition; Compound term; Nominal compositum; Compound Words; Compound (linguistics; Linguistic compounding; Parasynthetic compound; Word composition; Composed word; Composition (word); Composition (linguistics); Open compound; Spaced compound; Closed compound
In linguistics, a compound is a lexeme (less precisely, a word or sign) that consists of more than one stem. Compounding, composition or nominal composition is the process of word formation that creates compound lexemes.
Compound locomotive         
  • Typical early de Glehn's locomotive ([[Baden IV e]] of 1894), with high-pressure cylinders placed behind a front bogie, and driving the second set of wheels.
  • Burrell road locomotive, showing high- and low-pressure cylinders.
  • Vauclain four-cylinder compound locomotive [[Milwaukee Road class A2]] No. 919.
  • thumb
STEAM LOCOMOTIVE WHICH USES THE EXHAUST FROM ONE (SET OF) CYLINDER(S) TO POWER ANOTHER (SET OF) CYLINDER(S)
Compound locomotives; Compound steam locomotive; Tandem compound; Tandem cylinder; De Glehn compound; Tandem compound locomotive
A compound locomotive is a steam locomotive which is powered by a compound engine, a type of steam engine where steam is expanded in two or more stages. The locomotive was only one application of compounding.
combining form         
COMPOUND WORD COMPOSED FROM COMBINING FORMS (WHICH ACT AS AFFIXES OR STEMS) DERIVED FROM CLASSICAL LATIN OR ANCIENT GREEK ROOTS, SUCH AS BIOLOGY
Classical compounds; Combining form; National prefixes; Neoclassical compounds; Classical compound; Neo-classical compound
(combining forms)
A combining form is a word that is used, or used with a particular meaning, only when joined to another word. For example, '-legged' as in 'four-legged' and '-fold' as in 'fivefold' are combining forms.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Event (probability theory)

In probability theory, an event is a set of outcomes of an experiment (a subset of the sample space) to which a probability is assigned. A single outcome may be an element of many different events, and different events in an experiment are usually not equally likely, since they may include very different groups of outcomes. An event consisting of only a single outcome is called an elementary event or an atomic event; that is, it is a singleton set. An event S {\displaystyle S} is said to occur if S {\displaystyle S} contains the outcome x {\displaystyle x} of the experiment (or trial) (that is, if x S {\displaystyle x\in S} ). The probability (with respect to some probability measure) that an event S {\displaystyle S} occurs is the probability that S {\displaystyle S} contains the outcome x {\displaystyle x} of an experiment (that is, it is the probability that x S {\displaystyle x\in S} ). An event defines a complementary event, namely the complementary set (the event not occurring), and together these define a Bernoulli trial: did the event occur or not?

Typically, when the sample space is finite, any subset of the sample space is an event (that is, all elements of the power set of the sample space are defined as events). However, this approach does not work well in cases where the sample space is uncountably infinite. So, when defining a probability space it is possible, and often necessary, to exclude certain subsets of the sample space from being events (see Events in probability spaces, below).