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2008
We consider a planning problem that generalizes Alcuin’s river crossing problem (also known as: The wolf, goat, and cabbage puzzle) to scenarios with arbitrary conflict graphs. We derive a variety of combinatorial, structural, algorithmical, and complexity theoretical results around this problem.
Csorba, P. +2 more
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We consider a planning problem that generalizes Alcuin’s river crossing problem (also known as: The wolf, goat, and cabbage puzzle) to scenarios with arbitrary conflict graphs. We derive a variety of combinatorial, structural, algorithmical, and complexity theoretical results around this problem.
Csorba, P. +2 more
openaire +1 more source
PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, 1903
Attention has been called by Prof. A. S. Cook to an interesting parallel between the description of the Day of Judgment in Cynewulf's Elene , vv. 1277–1320, and a passage in Alcuin's De Fide Sanctae et Individuae Trinitatis. Prof. Cook believes that the
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Attention has been called by Prof. A. S. Cook to an interesting parallel between the description of the Day of Judgment in Cynewulf's Elene , vv. 1277–1320, and a passage in Alcuin's De Fide Sanctae et Individuae Trinitatis. Prof. Cook believes that the
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Neophilologus, 1996
The presentation of a de luxe comb of elephant ivory by Archbishop Riculf of Mainz to his friend Alcuin of York in c. 794 provided the occasion for two replies, one in a prose letter and the other in a verse epistle, in which Riculf's gift is playfully transformed into the subject of a descriptive riddle.
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The presentation of a de luxe comb of elephant ivory by Archbishop Riculf of Mainz to his friend Alcuin of York in c. 794 provided the occasion for two replies, one in a prose letter and the other in a verse epistle, in which Riculf's gift is playfully transformed into the subject of a descriptive riddle.
openaire +1 more source

