“What ___?!” (cry of surprise)

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THE.

Last seen on: NY Times Crossword 17 Dec 18, Monday

Random information on the term ““What ___?!” (cry of surprise)”:

E (named e /iː/, plural ees)[1] is the fifth letter and the second vowel in the modern English alphabet and the ISO basic Latin alphabet. It is the most commonly used letter in many languages, including Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Hungarian, Latin, Latvian, Norwegian, Spanish, and Swedish.[2][3][4][5][6]

The Latin letter ‘E’ differs little from its source, the Greek letter epsilon, ‘Ε’. This in turn comes from the Semitic letter hê, which has been suggested to have started as a praying or calling human figure (hillul ‘jubilation’), and was probably based on a similar Egyptian hieroglyph that indicated a different pronunciation. In Semitic, the letter represented /h/ (and /e/ in foreign words); in Greek, hê became the letter epsilon, used to represent /e/. The various forms of the Old Italic script and the Latin alphabet followed this usage.

Although Middle English spelling used ⟨e⟩ to represent long and short /e/, the Great Vowel Shift changed long /eː/ (as in ‘me’ or ‘bee’) to /iː/ while short /ɛ/ (as in ‘met’ or ‘bed’) remained a mid vowel. In other cases, the letter is silent, generally at the end of words.

“What ___?!” (cry of surprise) on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “THE”:

The THE multiprogramming system or THE OS was a computer operating system designed by a team led by Edsger W. Dijkstra, described in monographs in 1965-66[1] and published in 1968.[2]Dijkstra never named the system; “THE” is simply the abbreviation of “Technische Hogeschool Eindhoven”, then the name (in Dutch) of the Eindhoven University of Technology of the Netherlands. The THE system was primarily a batch system[3] that supported multitasking; it was not designed as a multi-user operating system. It was much like the SDS 940, but “the set of processes in the THE system was static”.[3]

The THE system apparently introduced the first forms of software-based paged virtual memory (the Electrologica X8 did not support hardware-based memory management),[3] freeing programmers from being forced to use actual physical locations on the drum memory. It did this by using a modified ALGOL compiler (the only programming language supported by Dijkstra’s system) to “automatically generate calls to system routines, which made sure the requested information was in memory, swapping if necessary”.[3] Paged virtual memory was also used for buffering I/O device data, and for a significant portion of the operating system code as well as nearly all of the ALGOL 60 compiler. In this system itself, semaphores have been used as a programming construct for the first time.

THE on Wikipedia