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4electros said:I see this word "Pseudo" in many references ,i couldn't know that it refers to exactly!!
That's confusing. Soodoe is a good phonetic spelling, but only the last "o" is long. The diphthong "oo" can't properly be described as long o's. Actually, sue-doe might be less confusing.Hero999 said:Or there's pseudo-code, which is a way of showing an algorithim without being tied to a particular programming language.
By the way the p is silent, it's pronounced soodoe, both o sounds are long as in boat.
Ron H said:That's confusing. Soodoe is a good phonetic spelling, but only the last "o" is long. The diphthong "oo" can't properly be described as long o's. Actually, sue-doe might be less confusing.
Your link only takes us to the top level of the forums. You need to link to the actual thread that has the occurrence of "pseudo".4electros said:I find "pseudo" word in this sentence:
{ Figure below shows the pseudo block of a decoder}
I read in wikipedia page that In Internet parlance, a pseudo (from pseudonym, a false name) is a computer program designed to simulate a human user.
but i think that's not identical to the word context meaning here. what do you think?
Ron H said:Your link only takes us to the top level of the forums. You need to link to the actual thread that has the occurrence of "pseudo".
4electros said:I find "pseudo" word in this sentence:
{ Figure below shows the pseudo block of a decoder}
I read in wikipedia page that In Internet parlance, a pseudo (from pseudonym, a false name) is a computer program designed to simulate a human user.
but i think that's not identical to the word context meaning here. what do you think?
wikipedia said:Pseudo is a prefix of Greek origin. It means "false".
It identifies something as superficially resembling the original subject; a pseudopod resembles a foot, and pseudorandom numbers simulate numbers generated by truly random events, but are in fact produced by an algorithm.
It is also used to mark something as false, fraudulent, or pretending to be something it is not in fact, as in pseudoscience or pseudophilosophy.