Source : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Notopodium \No`to*po"di*um\, n.; pl. L. {Notopodia}, {E}.
{Notopodiums}. [NL., fr. Gr. ? the back + ?, ?, the foot.]
(Zo["o]l.)
The dorsal lobe or branch of a parapodium. See {Parapodium}.
Amt \Amt\, n.; pl. {Amter}, {E}. {Amts}. [Dan. & Norw., fr. G.]
An administrative territorial division in Denmark and Norway.
Each of the provinces [of Denmark] is divided into
several amts, answering . . . to the English hundreds.
--Encyc. Brit.
Medium \Me"di*um\, n.; pl. L. {Media}, {E}. {Mediums}. [L.
medium the middle, fr. medius middle. See {Mid}, and cf.
{Medius}.]
1. That which lies in the middle, or between other things;
intervening body or quantity. Hence, specifically:
(a) Middle place or degree; mean.
The just medium . . . lies between pride and
abjection. --L'Estrange.
(b) (Math.) See {Mean}.
(c) (Logic) The mean or middle term of a syllogism; that
by which the extremes are brought into connection.
2. A substance through which an effect is transmitted from
one thing to another; as, air is the common medium of
sound. Hence: The condition upon which any event or action
occurs; necessary means of motion or action; that through
or by which anything is accomplished, conveyed, or carried
on; specifically, in animal magnetism, spiritualism, etc.,
a person through whom the action of another being is said
to be manifested and transmitted.
Whether any other liquors, being made mediums, cause
a diversity of sound from water, it may be tried.
--Bacon.
I must bring together All these extremes; and must
remove all mediums. --Denham.
3. An average. [R.]
A medium of six years of war, and six years of
peace. --Burke.
4. A trade name for printing and writing paper of certain
sizes. See {Paper}.
5. (Paint.) The liquid vehicle with which dry colors are
ground and prepared for application.
{Circulating medium}, a current medium of exchange, whether
coin, bank notes, or government notes.
{Ethereal medium} (Physics), the ether.
{Medium of exchange}, that which is used for effecting an
exchange of commodities -- money or current
representatives of money.
E \E\ ([=e]).
1. The fifth letter of the English alphabet.
Note: It derives its form, name, and value from the Latin,
the form and value being further derived from the
Greek, into which it came from the Ph[oe]nician, and
ultimately, probably, from the Egyptian. Its
etymological relations are closest with the vowels i,
a, and o, as illustrated by to fall, to fell; man, pl.
men; drink, drank, drench; dint, dent; doom, deem;
goose, pl. geese; beef, OF. boef, L. bos; and E. cheer,
OF. chiere, LL. cara.
Note: The letter e has in English several vowel sounds, the
two principal being its long or name sound, as in eve,
me, and the short, as in end, best. Usually at the end
of words it is silent, but serves to indicate that the
preceding vowel has its long sound, where otherwise it
would be short, as in m[=a]ne, c[=a]ne, m[=e]te, which
without the final e would be pronounced m[a^]n, c[a^]n,
m[e^]t. After c and g, the final e indicates that these
letters are to be pronounced as s and j; respectively,
as in lace, rage. See Guide to Pronunciation,
[sect][sect] 74-97.
2. (Mus.) E is the third tone of the model diatonic scale.
E[flat] (E flat) is a tone which is intermediate between D
and E.
Source : WordNet®
E
n 1: a fat-soluble vitamin that is essential for normal
reproduction; an important antioxidant that neutralizes
free radicals in the body [syn: {vitamin E}, {tocopherol}]
2: a radioactive transuranic element produced by bombarding
plutonium with neutrons [syn: {einsteinium}, {Es}, {atomic
number 99}]
3: the cardinal compass point that is at 90 degrees [syn: {east},
{due east}]
4: the base of the natural system of logarithms [syn: {2.718282...}]
5: the 5th letter of the Roman alphabet
Source : Free On-Line Dictionary of Computing
E
1. An extension of {C++} with {database} types and
{persistent} {object}s. E is a powerful and flexible
{procedural} programming language. It is used in the {Exodus}
database system.
See also {GNU E}.
{(ftp://ftp.cs.wisc.edu/exodus/E/)}.
["Persistence in the E Language: Issues and Implementation",
J.E. Richardson et al, Soft Prac & Exp 19(12):1115-1150 (Dec
1989)].
2. A {procedural language} by Wouter van
Oortmerssen with {semantics} similar to {C}. E features
lists, low-level {polymorphism}, {exception} handling, quoted
expressions, {pattern matching} and {object} {inheritance}.
{Amiga E} is a version for the {Amiga}.
(1999-10-05)