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Definition of Concurrent execution
1. Noun. The execution of two or more computer programs by a single computer.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Concurrent Execution
Literary usage of Concurrent execution
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Technology 2002 (1993)
"In such cases a concurrent execution of the processes can lead to a result ...
The goal is to adjust or limit the concurrent execution of the processes so ..."
2. The Bengal Law Reports of Decisions of the High Court at Fort William Civil by Great Britain Privy Council. Judicial Committee, Bengal (India). Board of Revenue, Bengal (India). Supreme Council (1878)
"A Court has power to send its decree for concurrent execution into several places,
although in its discretion it may refuse to exercise such power. ..."
3. The American State Reports: Containing the Cases of General Value and by Abraham Clark Freeman (1901)
"... and that it can only be so alienated or encumbered by the joint and concurrent
execution of the instrument by the two. Neither In- goldsby v. ..."
4. A Code of Federal Procedure: (Superseding Detsy's Federal Procedure by Walter Malins Rose (1907)
"... judgment plaintiff a right to concurrent execution all over the State.2 But
its provisions do not give a corporation complainant the right to bring suit ..."
5. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Court of Exchequer: From by Great Britain Court of Exchequer, George Price, Great Britain Court of Exchequer Chamber (1820)
"... but it was never intended by that statute to take away the Crown's priority
in cases of concurrent execution with the subject, because the subject had a ..."
6. The Works of Alexander Hamilton by Alexander Hamilton (1904)
"The idea of a concurrent execution of both the objects to which the loans were
destined could not, conveniently, have been pursued upon the plan of a ..."
7. Journal of Comparative Legislation and International Law by Society of Comparative Legislation, London (1900)
"It is abundantly clear that concurrent execution can only take effect as regards
punishments of the same character and undergone in the same institution. ..."