Rudiment in a sentence as a noun

So, then, argue that teaching rote math and English rudiments is brainwashing.

Both native and web apps are layers of abstraction over OS rudiments.

When I was learning how to program, I asked the friend who was teaching me the rudiments "How long does it take to learn how to code?

Clearly we're capable of rebuilding our own ecosystem, at least the rudiments of one.

In 2009 we live in an age of biotechnology and life science capabilities that is far, far removed from the rudiments of 1970.

> It has been asserted that the ear of man alone possesses a lobule; but 'a rudiment of it is found in the gorilla' and, as I hear from Prof.

In fact there is evidence that the rudiments of language arise in groups of many animal species including apes, whales, and dolphins.

Here's your rudiment/instrument notationzk = suspended cymbalbschk = snarepv = brushbk = basstk = flam1vk = roll tapkt = flam2kttp = flam tapkrp = hi hat tappv = short rollth = better hi hatthp, ds = instant rimshot.

We know that stone age peoples who had only just recently developed the rudiments of agriculture traveled through Europe and Asia to set up colonies.

While I have no doubt that she picked up the rudiments of programming within this time, I think it's fairly clear that she had "spilled the beans" in order to take this project to the extent that it is available today.

If I'm going to be doing a project in Visual Studio, or deploying a database on SQL Server, or using the security services of Windows, it is in my interest to understand the platforms that I'm using, and those certifications provided a personal goal that I could shoot for to achieve those rudiments.

What residual value would stick from such fleeing interactions with the rudiments of coding?It seems to me that, if one is to derive true value from learning to code, one needs to devote a significant level of dedicated hard work toward that effort and, if one fails to get beyond a minimal threshold, the only value gained is that of a very generalized form of knowledge that has little practical use in the real world.

The rudiments of modern theory can be understood with little more difficulty, and it is clear from those that any significant restriction of the number of degrees of freedom of a model reduces the chances of overfitting occurring, but also decreases the fraction of predicitions the model will get right, so the real issue is where exactly do we draw a line, and this is now understood quite well - the approach from the paper, for practical purposes, throws out the baby with the bathwater.

Rudiment definitions

noun

the elementary stages of any subject (usually plural); "he mastered only the rudiments of geometry"

See also: alphabet ABC's ABCs

noun

the remains of a body part that was functional at an earlier stage of life; "Meckel's diverticulum is the rudiment of the embryonic yolk sac"