1. superset - Noun
2. superset - Verb
(set theory) (symbol: ⊇) With respect to another set, a set such that each of the elements of the other set is also an element of the set.
The set of human beings is a superset of the set of human children.
The set of characters "LBPG" is a superset of the set of characters "PG".
(weightlifting) Two or more different physical exercises performed back to back, without a period of rest between them. The exercises may employ the same muscle group, or opposing muscle groups.
superset (third-person singular simple present supersets, present participle supersetting, simple past and past participle supersetted)
(weightlifting, transitive) To perform (different physical exercises) back to back, without a period of rest between them.
A maximal L-consistent set (an L-MCS for short) is an L-consistent set which has no proper L-consistent superset. Source: Internet
A superset of this language, called the Bach language, citation is defined as the set of all strings where "a", "b" and "c" (or any other set of three symbols) occurs equally often (aabccb, baabcaccb, etc.) and is also context-sensitive. Source: Internet
A location can, however, be rewritten as long as the new value's 0 bits are a superset of the over-written values. Source: Internet
A motivating goal for SIP was to provide a signaling and call setup protocol for IP-based communications that can support a superset of the call processing functions and features present in the public switched telephone network (PSTN). Source: Internet
Furthermore, the MDCT implementation used in WMA is essentially a superset of those used in Ogg and AAC such that WMA iMDCT and windowing routines can be used to decode AAC and Ogg Vorbis almost unmodified. Source: Internet
Between 1989 and 2015 Hewlett-Packard used another superset of ISO-8859-1 on many of their calculators. Source: Internet