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cavil    
n. 无端的指责,挑剔
vi.
vt. 吹毛求疵

无端的指责,挑剔吹毛求疵

cavil
n 1: an evasion of the point of an argument by raising
irrelevant distinctions or objections [synonym: {quibble},
{quiddity}, {cavil}]
v 1: raise trivial objections [synonym: {cavil}, {carp}, {chicane}]

Kevel \Kev"el\, n. [Prov. E. kevil, cavel, rod, pole, a large
hammer, horse's bit; cf. Icel. kefli cylinder, a stick,
mangle, and Dan. kievle a roller.]
1. (Naut.) A strong cleat to which large ropes are belayed.
[1913 Webster]

2. A stone mason's hammer. [Written also {cavil}.]
[1913 Webster]

{Kevel head} (Naut.), a projecting end of a timber, used as a
kevel. Kevel


Cavil \Cav"il\ (k[a^]v"[i^]l), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Caviled} or
{Cavilled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Caviling} or {Cavilling}.] [L.
cavillari to practice jesting, to censure, fr. cavilla
bantering jests, sophistry: cf. OF. caviller.]
To raise captious and frivolous objections; to find fault
without good reason.
[1913 Webster]

You do not well in obstinacy
To cavil in the course of this contract. --Shak.
[1913 Webster]


Cavil \Cav"il\, v. t.
To cavil at. [Obs.] --Milton.
[1913 Webster]


Cavil \Cav"il\, n.
A captious or frivolous objection.
[1913 Webster]

All the cavils of prejudice and unbelief. --Shak.
[1913 Webster] Caviler

117 Moby Thesaurus words for "cavil":
adverse criticism, animadversion, argue, argufy, around the bush,
aspersion, bad notices, bad press, bandy words, beat about,
beg the question, bicker, boggle, captiousness, carp, carping,
catch at straws, caviling, censoriousness, censure, chicane,
choplogic, complain, complaint, contend, contest, criticism,
criticize, cross swords, cut and thrust, cut up, demur, discept,
dispute, dodge, equivocate, evade, evade the issue, exception,
fault-find, faultfinding, fence, find fault, flak, give and take,
hairsplitting, hassle, have it out, hedge, hit, home thrust,
hostile criticism, hypercriticalness, hypercriticism, imputation,
jesuitism, join issue, knock, lock horns, logomachize, moot,
mystify, nagging, niggle, niggling, nit, nit-picking, nitpick,
object, obloquy, obscure, overcriticalness, palter, parry,
pestering, pettifog, pettifogging, pick holes, pick nits,
pick to pieces, plead, polemicize, polemize, prevaricate,
priggishness, pull apart, pull to pieces, pussyfoot, quibble,
quibbling, quiddity, quillet, quip, quirk, quodlibet, rap,
reflection, reproachfulness, shift, shuffle, shy, sidestep, slam,
spar, split hairs, stricture, swipe, take exception, take sides,
taking exception, tear apart, tear to pieces, tergiversate,
thrash out, trichoschistism, try conclusions, wrangle


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  • c - Pipes, dup2 and exec () - Stack Overflow
    Incidentally, if you look at the code in github com jleffler soq tree master src so-4380-8114, you'll find an interesting example where 'not closing enough file descriptors caused the program to fail on big enough inputs' When the input was small, it worked fine
  • pranjalxdewangan Interprocess-Communication-OS - GitHub
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  • dup (2) - Linux manual page - man7. org
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  • Unix Processes: fork, exec, wait, and Everything In Between
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  • Pipes – Fundamental IPC Mechanism - Page 4 of 5 | OneNoughtOne
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  • Pipes, Forks, Dups: Understanding Command Execution and . . . - rozmichelle
    In this post, we’ll go over how Unix commands pass data to each other via pipes and input output redirection and I’ll illustrate what actually happens to the flow of data when a command is executed
  • L2 - iitd-plos. github. io
    Read Chapter 3 of Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment by W Richard Stevens for a detailed understanding of how file descriptors are implemented In particular, read Section 3 10 to understand how file sharing works
  • dup () and dup2 () Linux system call - GeeksforGeeks
    The dup2 () system call is similar to dup () but the basic difference between them is that instead of using the lowest-numbered unused file descriptor, it uses the descriptor number specified by the user





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