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Originally the second of three degrees in sequence – Legum Baccalaureus (LL.B., last conferred by an American law school in 1970); LL.M.; and Legum Doctor (LL.D.) or Doctor of Laws, which has only been conferred in the United States as an honorary degree but is an earned degree in other countries. In American legal academia, the LL.M. was ...
An advanced professional degree provides further training in a specialized area of the profession. A first professional degree is an academic degree designed to prepare the holder for a particular career or profession, fields in which scholarly research and academic activity are not the profession, but rather the practice of the profession.
where , and are nonterminal symbols, and is a terminal symbol, because Robert W. Floyd found any BNF syntax can be converted to the above one in 1961. [11] But he withdrew this term, "since doubtless many people have independently used this simple fact in their own work, and the point is only incidental to the main considerations of Floyd's note."
Thomas Edmund Molloy (non-degreed), prelate of the Catholic Church and Bishop of Brooklyn 1921–1956; Leo Edward O'Neil (non-degreed), prelate of the Roman Catholic Church and bishop of the Diocese of Manchester 1990–1997; Wilfrid Paradis, priest of the Diocese of Manchester, NH, expert at the Second Vatican Council, recipient of the US Army ...
Here, the nonterminal T can generate all strings with more a's than b's, the nonterminal U generates all strings with more b's than a's and the nonterminal V generates all strings with an equal number of a's and b's. Omitting the third alternative in the rules for T and U does not restrict the grammar's language.
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro is a public institution located in Greensboro, North Carolina.The university was known as the State Normal and Industrial School from 1891 to 1896, the State Normal and Industrial College from 1896 to 1919, the North Carolina College for Women from 1919 to 1932, and the Woman's College of the University of North Carolina from 1932 to 1963.
All the points illustrated by circles and diamonds are nodes in Figure 1, and the former are called nonterminal nodes and the latter terminal nodes. [2]
The string "the dog ate the bone" was created using production rules that replaced non-terminal with terminal symbols. [1]In formal languages, terminal and nonterminal symbols are the lexical elements used in specifying the production rules constituting a formal grammar.