Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun The totality of the natural world, often excluding humans.
- noun A subset of the natural world; an ecosystem.
- noun The combination of external physical conditions that affect and influence the growth, development, behavior, and survival of organisms.
- noun The complex of social and cultural conditions affecting the nature of an individual person or community.
- noun The general set of conditions or circumstances.
- noun The entire set of conditions under which one operates a computer, as it relates to the hardware, operating platform, or operating system.
- noun An area of a computer's memory used by the operating system and some programs to store certain variables to which they need frequent access.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun The act of environing or surrounding, or the state of being environed.
- noun That which environs; the aggregate of surrounding things or conditions.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun Act of environing; state of being environed.
- noun That which environs or surrounds; surrounding conditions, influences, or forces, by which living forms are influenced and modified in their growth and development.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun The surroundings of, and influences on, a particular item of interest.
- noun The natural world or
ecosystem . - noun All the elements over which a designer has no control and that affect a system or its inputs and outputs.
- noun A particular
political orsocial setting,arena or condition. - noun computing The
software and/orhardware existing on any particularcomputer system . - noun programming The environment of a
function at a point during the execution of a program is the set ofidentifiers in the function'sscope and theirbindings at that point. - noun computing The set of
variables and theirvalues in anamespace that anoperating system associates with aprocess .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun the totality of surrounding conditions
- noun the area in which something exists or lives
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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I have to admit that some of the insights had a “Well, Duh!” quality when I first read them ie that a phenotype which enjoys a reproductive advantage in one environment may be selected against in another environment*.
Applications of Evolution 3 - tradeoffs in resistance. - The Panda's Thumb 2006
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That is, a non-mammalian is a fertilized egg _plus_ its parental (or extra-parental) environment; but a mammalian individual is a fertilized egg, _plus its intra-maternal environment_, plus its non-parental environment.
Taboo and Genetics A Study of the Biological, Sociological and Psychological Foundation of the Family Melvin Moses Knight 1934
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A Goldman spokesman said: "The firm produced very good results for 2009, but the environment is very difficult and the board was mindful of that difficult environment in making decisions about executive compensation."
Latest financial, market & economic news and analysis | guardian.co.uk 2010
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However, I use the term environment in a different way than most are accustomed to.
On Stalin, Child Abuse, and Crime - Freakonomics Blog - NYTimes.com 2007
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The term environment is used in this statement broadly to also include health, safety, and the conservation of natural resources.
Fact Sheet On Policy Declaration On Environment And Trade ITY National Archives 1999
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The term environment of evolutionary adaptedness attachment theory.
Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en] 2009
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The term environment of evolutionary adaptedness attachment theory.
Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en] 2009
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Attempts by Europe's far right to couch their anti-immigrant arguments in the language of the environment is another thing that surprised me.
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The impact on the environment is the same or worse.
Nick Joy: GM Salmon Is Just Plain Wrong Nick Joy 2010
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The impact on the environment is the same or worse.
Nick Joy: GM Salmon Is Just Plain Wrong Nick Joy 2010
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