See also: algol and ALGOL

English

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Etymology 1

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From Arabic الْغُول (al-ḡūl, the ghoul).

Proper noun

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Algol

  1. (astronomy) An eclipsing binary star in the constellation of Perseus; Beta (β) Persei. It represents the eye of Medusa, whose head is being held by Perseus.
Translations
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Etymology 2

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Proper noun

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Algol

  1. (computer languages) Alternative letter-case form of ALGOL
    • 1972, Thomas M. Disch, 334
      He was the defiant homesteader, the crusty senior member of a research team who understood Algol and Fortran but couldn't read the secrets of his own heart.
    • 2004, Edward G. Nilges, Build Your Own .NET Language and Compiler, Apress, →ISBN, page 2:
      Algol, on the other hand, introduced the notion of block structure, in which the programmer could group lists of statements, effectively creating one instruction out of a list of instructions.

Anagrams

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Italian

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Italian Wikipedia has an article on:
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Etymology

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From Arabic اَلْغُول (al-ḡūl, the ghoul).

Proper noun

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Algol f

  1. Algol, a binary star in the constellation of Perseus

Anagrams

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Portuguese

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Proper noun

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Algol f

  1. (astronomy) Algol (binary star in the constellation of Perseus)

Spanish

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Arabic اَلْغُول (al-ḡūl, the ghoul).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /alˈɡol/ [alˈɣ̞ol]
  • Rhymes: -ol
  • Syllabification: Al‧gol

Proper noun

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Algol f

  1. (astronomy) Algol (binary star in the constellation of Perseus)