Terms

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terms
n. stipulated requirements, conditions or requirements that are specified
 
term
v. name, call, designate
 
n. word; expression, idiom; semester; specified time period; condition, stipulation (e.g. the terms of an agreement)


Wikipedia English The Free EncyclopediaDownload this dictionary
Term
Term may refer to:LinguisticsTerm (language), a word or compound word used in a specific contextTechnical term, part of the specialized vocabulary of a specific field
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This article uses material from Wikipedia® and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License

WordNet 2.0 DictionaryDownload this dictionary
terms
Noun
1. status with respect to the relations between people or groups; "on good terms with her in-laws"; "on a friendly footing"
(synonym) footing
(hypernym) status, position
2. the amount of money needed to purchase something; "the price of gasoline"; "he got his new car on excellent terms"; "how much is the damage?"
(synonym) price, damage
(hypernym) cost
(hyponym) asking price, selling price

 
term
Noun
1. a word or expression used for some particular thing; "he learned many medical terms"
(hypernym) word
(hyponym) referent
2. a limited period of time; "a prison term"; "he left school before the end of term"
(hypernym) time period, period of time, period
(hyponym) prison term, sentence, time
(part-meronym) midterm
3. (usually plural) a statement of what is required as part of an agreement; "the contract set out the conditions of the lease"; "the terms of the treaty were generous"
(synonym) condition
(hypernym) statement
(part-holonym) agreement, understanding
(classification) plural, plural form
4. any distinct quantity contained in a polynomial; "the general term of an algebraic equation of the n-th degree"
(hypernym) quantity
5. one of the substantive phrases in a logical proposition; "the major term of a syllogism must occur twice"
(hypernym) constituent, grammatical constituent
(hyponym) subject
(part-holonym) proposition
6. the end of gestation or point at which birth is imminent; "a healthy baby born at full term"
(synonym) full term
(hypernym) point, point in time
(part-holonym) gestation, gestation period
7. (architecture) a statue or a human bust or an animal carved out of the top of a square pillar; originally used as a boundary marker in ancient Rome
(synonym) terminus, terminal figure
(hypernym) statue
(classification) architecture
Verb
1. name formally or designate with a term
(hypernym) name, call


BabylonGerman English dictionaryDownload this dictionary
Term (der)
n. term, word; expression, idiom

FOLDOC DictionaryDownload this dictionary
TERM
1. <networking> A program by Michael O'Reilly michael@iinet.com.au for people running Unix who have Internet access via a dial-up connection, and who don't have access to SLIP, or PPP, or simply prefer a more lightweight protocol. TERM does end-to-end error-correction, compression and mulplexing across serial links. This means you can upload and download files as the same time you're reading your news, and can run X clients on the other side of your modem link, all without needing SLIP or PPP.
Current version: 1.15.
ftp://tartarus.uwa.edu.au/pub/oreillym/term/term115.tar.gz.
2.  Technology Enabled Relationship Management.
(1999-10-04)


(c) Copyright 1993 by Denis Howe

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