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"bucketing" Antonyms

44 Sentences With "bucketing"

How to use bucketing in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bucketing" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bucketing". Mastering all the usages of "bucketing" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Everyone knows they're Rickrolling ironically; everyone knows they're ice-bucketing sincerely.
Wedding fundSaving for a wedding is another reason to use the "bucketing" method.
Rosa said he likes bucketing because it makes tracking savings progress even easier.
Our nested endgame solving technique means Libratus does not need to do this bucketing.
Fitch believes that the bucketing system may deter G-SIIs from becoming larger and more complex.
It'll make it easier to compartmentalize your goals — a budgeting strategy financial planners call "bucketing."3.
This "abstraction" of gameplay sequences and "bucketing" of possibilities greatly reduces the possibilities Pluribus has to consider.
King faced a media barrage after bucketing these children of undocumented immigrants as criminals back in 2013.
We then performed the same "bucketing" and analysis as before, this time focusing on the sum of all previous equity funding.
THE RULE REQUIRES THE CATEGORIZING OR YOU KNOW, BUCKETING OF HIGHLY LIQUID INVESTMENTS AND THE FUND NEEDS TO IMPOSE WITH BOARD APPROVAL.
Bucketing results into "statistically significant" and "statistically non-significant," they write, leads to a too black-and-white approach to scrutinizing science.
By bucketing his duties, two things became clear to me: several potential themes exist, and most of his "skills" weren't skills at all.
Purchasing household items might sound small, but that action is a big signifier that I'm done bucketing my life into "married" and "not yet married" activities.
A Japanese tourist, who would only give his name as Hiroshi, stood among the handful of locals and retirees taking shelter from the bucketing rain, carefully marking down wagers on small betting slips.
So it goes with the bucketing of the series of high-profile upsets to the political status quo this year into an allegedly uniform set of "populist" votes, all purportedly rallying behind a singular cause.
Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland, states hit badly by the bushfires that have so far killed 29 people, destroyed more than 2,500 homes and scorched millions of acres of land, are now dealing with rain bucketing down.
After spending the next hour and a half bucketing water out of the thing and finally reaching the boat's loading ramp, Bjorklund and his assistant were greeted by officers from several US government agencies pointing rifles at them, he told me.
And unlike, say, trying to understand your problems through a clinical source like the D.S.M." — the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the Baedeker of pathologies and a bucketing good read — "all of the categories tend to have some generally objectively positive traits.
Elton John was another regular, though Mr. Moss's only interaction with that pop star came late in the store's long, bucketing run, when Mr. John suggested he carry the iron gates made by Bob Dylan, a suggestion Mr. Moss did not follow through on.
They were on trial for twelve grand larceny and bucketing indictments.
Some Arab horsemen from behind the Turks galloped towards us, bucketing unhandily across the irrigation ditches.
Lawyer Peter McCoy was prosecutor. On November 29, 1924, Silkworth and five others also found guilty of bucketing, with Silkworth convicted of mail fraud relating to his brokerage and Raynor, Nicholas and Truesdell in 1922. During the appeal process, McCoy gave testimony before the Circuit Court of Appeals that Raynor, Nicholas & Truesdell had engaged in extensive bucketing operations since its founding late 1920. McCoy further testified that Silkworth had provided the firm's bucketing operations with the protection of Consolidated.
During the appeal process, McCoy gave testimony before the Circuit Court of Appeals that Raynor, Nicholas & Truesdell had engaged in extensive bucketing operations since its founding late 1920. McCoy further testified that Silkworth had provided the firm's bucketing operations with the protection of Consolidated. The Judge ruled against the motion raised by defendants, which was that bucketing did not have a Federal statute against it at the time, and ruled in favor of McCoy on February 1, 1926 with the November conviction upheld. Silkworth served three months of a year sentence in 1926, with other brokers also serving time.
Accessed 15 November 2018.Our Board: Cathy O'Connor , Sony Foundation. Accessed 15 November 2018. In 2014, she took the Ice Bucket Challenge.(3 September 2014) Nova CEO gets a bucketing, radioinfo. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
After Silkworth and seven others were indicted in late May 1924 for connection with the bankruptcy of Raynor, Nicholas & Truesdell, Silkworth pleaded not guilty on May 29, 1924 while held on $8,500 on bail. Trial was set for August. On November 29, 1924, Silkworth was convicted of the fraudulent use of mails in bucketing operations, as well as five others also found guilty of bucketing. In particular, Silkworth was convicted of mail fraud relating to his brokerage and the brokerage house of Raynor, Nicholas and Truesdell in 1922.
"Bucket Shop Secrets", The New York Times, July 9, 1922. Bucketing of orders violates several provisions of U.S. securities law., "It shall be unlawful to bucket an order ..." These prohibitions apply to legitimate brokerages as well as bucket shops.
The books were sought by the prosecution to help in seeking a bucketing indictment. The Ottinger investigation began in late May. In June 1923 it was reported that Silkworth would resign from Consolidated, and that the new exchange committee might demand his immediate resignation. Silkworth testified on June 6.
Raynor, Nicholas & Truesdell was a New York brokerage based on Broadway in the 1920s. It was a member of the Consolidated Stock Exchange, before failing on April 29, 1922. The failure resulted in a highly publicized lawsuit over whether the firm committed mail fraud and bucketing before failing.
Corley-Smith, Peter and David N. Parker: Helicopters in the High Country – 40 Years of Mountain Flying, page 50. Sono Nis Press, Victoria BC, 1995. In the early 1960s the California Division of Forestry (now known as CALFIRE) began water bucketing trials. Testing was also done on a 105-U.
The Judge ruled against the motion raised by defendants, which was that bucketing did not have a Federal statute against it at the time, and ruled in favor of McCoy on February 1, 1926 with the November conviction upheld. Silkworth served three months of a year sentence in 1926, with other brokers also serving time.
In 1923, Brickley was indicted on charges of illegal stock negotiations. He was found not guilty of forgery and larceny by a jury on May 28, 1925. On March 1, 1928 Brickley was found guilty of four counts of larceny and bucketing orders from customers of Charles E. Brickley, Inc., stock brokerage firm, from 1925 to 1927.
The brokerage firm was founded in 1920 in New York. According to records, as early as November 21, 1921, Consolidated had discussed the firm's methods, as it was known for bucketing. As of 1922, it was based at 42 Broadway and 30 East 42nd Street, and were members of the Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York. Firm members included D. C. Raynor, E. H. Truesdell, and B. J. Nicholas.
In computer science, radix sort is a non-comparative sorting algorithm. It avoids comparison by creating and distributing elements into buckets according to their radix. For elements with more than one significant digit, this bucketing process is repeated for each digit, while preserving the ordering of the prior step, until all digits have been considered. For this reason, radix sort has also been called bucket sort and digital sort.
A common memory optimization introduces a step called bucketing prior to the dicing step. The output image is divided into a coarse grid of "buckets," each typically 16 by 16 pixels in size. The objects are then split roughly along the bucket boundaries and placed into buckets based on their location. Each bucket is diced and drawn individually, and the data from the previous bucket is discarded before the next bucket is processed.
This practice became known as bucketing, and the location at which they drained the kegs became known as a bucket shop. The idea was transferred to illegal brokers because they too sought to profit from sources too small or too unreliable for legitimate brokers to handle.John Hill, Gold Bricks of Speculation 39 (Chicago Lincoln Book Concern, 1904). The term bucket shop came to apply to low-class pseudo stock brokerages that did not execute trades.
Data binning (also called Discrete binning or bucketing) is a data pre- processing technique used to reduce the effects of minor observation errors. The original data values which fall into a given small interval, a bin, are replaced by a value representative of that interval, often the central value. It is a form of quantization. Statistical data binning is a way to group numbers of more or less continuous values into a smaller number of "bins".
The Terrace Mountain Fire started at around 5:30 pm, July 18, 2009, in the mountains behind Fintry, British Columbia, just north of West Kelowna. The fire was considered to be the least threatening of the 3 fires and burned with minimal suppression efforts for the first 12 hours. Resources on site include 70 firefighters, 4 water-bucketing helicopters, heavy equipment and air tankers. There are no evacuations or alerts at this point although the fire is moving east towards Okanagan lake.
On February 4, 1926, Supreme Court Justice John Ford granted temporary injunction to "restrain the Consolidated Stock Exchange from continuing certain practices alleged by the Attorney General to be illegal." The exchange was given until the 11th to prove to the courts their actions were not illegal. Thomas B. Maloney, the exchange president at the time, said the exchange would remain operational. Among the banned actions were bucket shops, which had "more or less had the exchange under fire" for extensive bucketing operations.
In this approach, two continuous state variables are pushed into discrete states by bucketing each continuous variable into multiple discrete states. This approach works with properly tuned parameters but a disadvantage is information gathered from one state is not used to evaluate another state. Tile coding can be used to improve discretization and involves continuous variables mapping into sets of buckets offset from one another. Each step of training has a wider impact on the value function approximation because when the offset grids are summed, the information is diffused.
The trustee wanted to question the Silkworths in the search for assets, particularly $6,612,000 worth of securities which had allegedly been possessed by the Fuller firm at the time of its bankruptcy. On April 26, 1923, the New York Times reported that for two weeks, process servers had failed to find and serve the Silkworths with the subpoenas. At the time, the trial concerning the E. M. Fuller & Co. bankruptcy was awaiting the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court on the right to use record-books of the firm. The books were sought by the prosecution to help in seeking a bucketing indictment.
During the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2009 (COP15), there was a rival conference in Copenhagen, Denmark, for deniers, called the Copenhagen Climate Challenge. which was organised by the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow. While COP15 attracted 33,200 delegates, the rival deniers' conference was attended by 60 people (15 journalists, 18 speakers, 27 audience). According to Lenore Taylor of The Australian, the attendees had an average age "well over 60". In closing his speech, Plimer stated that “They’ve got us outnumbered, but we’ve got them outgunned, and that’s with the truth.” Plimer also stated that "It's been freezing in Perth and bucketing down".
Although Assistant Attorney General William F. McKenna failed to implicate Silkworth in the Fuller bankruptcy, he did uncover irregularities in Silkworth's personal finances. The irregularities showed he had made large deposits in March 1922, some related to the Fuller account. On June 6, 1923, Fuller and McGee were sentenced to fifteen months to four years, to begin serving in June 1927. That day, Judge Henry W. Goddard signed an unusual order for Fuller to be brought from the Ludlow Street Jail each day under armed guard to the General Sessions of the Fuller trial, concerning the indictment charging him with bucketing a stock order.
E. M. Fuller and Co. bankruptcy trial, or the Fuller case, was a criminal trial referring to the prosecution of Edward M. Fuller and William F. McGee for using their brokerage firm E. M. Fuller and Co. as a "bucket shop" in the early 1920s. United States Attorney William Hayward was assisted in the case by assistant US Attorney John E. Joyce. The case started when the firm went bankrupt in 1922, and creditors petitioned to recover assets from E. M. Fuller & Co., as the assets "mysteriously disappeared" when the firm went bankrupt. Ultimately Fuller and McGee pled guilty, and were convicted of operating a bucketshop in connection with E.M. Fuller Co., for defrauding its customers around $4,000,000 by bucketing the orders of customers.
With the New York Times proclaiming him a "foe of stock frauds," McCoy became known for conducting the "successful bucket shop investigation of 1924," wherein he prosecuted New York stockbroker William S. Silkworth, members of the firm Raynor, Nicholas & Truesdell, and others for operating bucketshops and bucketing. The case was instigated by events starting in February 1922, when the Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York was hit "without warning" with several brokerage and firm failures, followed by more failures in late February 1922 and mid-July 1922, shocking the industry. In July 1922, Consolidated president Silkworth conceded that some Consolidated brokers were corrupt, with reforms to underway to clear the exchange of them. Others accused him of misusing the rescue fund from February, which Silkworth denied.

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