Links

  • (noun): Course consisting of a large landscaped area for playing golf.
    Synonyms: golf course, golf links

Some articles on link, links:

TwixT - Rules
... edition and all later editions.) After placing a peg, you may link one or more pairs of pegs on the board which are all your own colour ... The links can only go between two pegs a knight's move away from each other, and cannot cross another link they block other links, most importantly the opponent's ... As part of your move, you may remove your own links (but not your opponent's) in order to rearrange the sequence of links on the board ...
Fat Tree
... scientist's notion of a tree, which has "skinny" links all over, the links in a fat-tree become "fatter" as one moves up the tree towards the root ... By judiciously choosing the fatness of links, the network can be tailored to efficiently use any bandwidth made available by packaging and communications technology ...
Golf Course - Links Course
... Links is a Scottish term, from the Old English word hlinc "rising ground, ridge", describing coastal sand dunes and sometimes similar areas inland ... It is on links land near the towns of central eastern Scotland that golf has been played since the 1400s ... shallow top soil and sandy subsoil made links land unsuitable for the cultivation of crops or for urban development and was of low economic value ...
Renga in The West
... the members would read the renga being offered and then could write a connecting link ... Wilson tabulated these links and then all the possible links were sent back to the participants ... This meant that instead of having linear links, the renga expanded outward into many versions of the same poem ...

Famous quotes containing the word links:

    I’ve gradually risen from lower-class background to lower-class foreground.
    Marvin Cohen, U.S. author and humorist. Baseball the Beautiful, Links Books (1970)

    All nationalisms are at heart deeply concerned with names: with the most immaterial and original human invention. Those who dismiss names as a detail have never been displaced; but the peoples on the peripheries are always being displaced. That is why they insist upon their continuity—their links with their dead and the unborn.
    John Berger (b. 1926)

    Nothing is more indispensable to true religiosity than a mediator that links us with divinity.
    Novalis [Friedrich Von Hardenberg] (1772–1801)