Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A framework of crisscrossed or parallel bars; a grating or mesh.
- noun A cooking surface of parallel metal bars; a gridiron.
- noun Something resembling a framework of crisscrossed parallel bars, as in rigidity or organization.
- noun A pattern of regularly spaced horizontal and vertical lines forming squares on a map, a chart, an aerial photograph, or an optical device, used as a reference for locating points.
- noun An interconnected system for the distribution of electricity or electromagnetic signals over a wide area, especially a network of high-tension cables and power stations.
- noun A corrugated or perforated conducting plate in a storage battery.
- noun Football The gridiron.
- noun Sports The starting positions of cars on a racecourse.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun A grating or openwork cover for a
- noun A heavy framing of timbers used to support a ship in a dock.
- noun In electricity, a zinc element in a primary battery, shaped like a grating or gridiron; the lead plate of a secondary or storage battery, consisting of a framework of bars crossing one another at right angles, into the openings of which the active matter of the plate is forced; also, a grating of ebonite used to prevent contact between battery-plates.
- noun A name applied to a particular arrangement of members in which a number of narrow, parallel members lying in one plane are fastened at their ends to two heavier parallel members perpendicular to the others.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun A grating of thin parallel bars, similar to a gridiron.
- noun (Elec.) A plate or sheet of lead with perforations, or other irregularities of surface, by which the active material of a secondary battery or accumulator is supported.
- noun (Electronics) a mesh or coil of fine wire in an electron tube, connected to the circuit so as to regulate the current passing through the tube.
- noun any network of crossing horizontal and vertical lines; -- they are used, for example, as reference coordinates to locate objects or places on a map.
- noun anything resembling a grid{4}, as the Manhattan street
grid . See alsogridlock . - noun a network of connected conductors for distributing electrical power, especially one using high-tension lines for wide geographic distribution of power.
- noun (Football) the
gridiron .
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A rectangular
array of squares or rectangles of equal size, such as in acrossword puzzle. - noun A system for delivery of electricity, consisting of various substations, transformers and generators, connected by wire.
- noun computing A system or structure of
distributed computers working mostly on apeer-to-peer basis, such structures being known as a computational grid or simply grid computing, and used mainly to solve single and complex scientific or technical problems or to process data at high speeds (as in clusters). - noun cartography A method of
marking offmaps into areas. - noun motor racing The
pattern of starting positions of the drivers for a race. - verb To
mark with a grid. - verb To assign a
reference grid to.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun an electrode placed between the cathode and anode of a vacuum tube to control the flow of electrons through the tube
- noun a system of high tension cables by which electrical power is distributed throughout a region
- noun a cooking utensil of parallel metal bars; used to grill fish or meat
- noun a perforated or corrugated metal plate used in a storage battery as a conductor and support for the active material
- noun a pattern of regularly spaced horizontal and vertical lines
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
Support
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Examples
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The term grid computing originated in the early 1990s as a metaphor for making computer power as easy to access as an electric power grid in Ian Foster's and Carl Kesselman's seminal work,
Webwereld 2010
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Solar panels across the desserts with efficient high power lines to get it on the grid is a cheaper option.
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In practice, however, the grid is an interstate concern.
Matthew Yglesias » An Electrical Grid We Can Believe In 2009
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Cross bridge and go to where the grid is across the stream and get bottle.
Archive 2007-11-01 2007
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This sequence of numbers representing the height of the surface at each point on the grid is then rendered by the computer to look like a three-dimensional solid.
August 2007 2007
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The limiting factor for the grid is the fact that “private” power companies have no incentive to upgrade or increase capacity.
Oil « BuzzMachine 2005
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We're concentrating on a more thorough search, what we call a grid search where we put people at closer spacing, work slower.
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It's not that the grid is antiquated; it's that our demand for energy is insatiable.
Boing Boing: September 14, 2003 - September 20, 2003 Archives 2003
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They will figure out an area, about 150 to 250 square miles, and they will just go line by line, go down what they call a grid search, just hoping for something.
CNN Transcript - Breaking News: U.S. Military Searching for Missing Cuban Plane - September 19, 2000 2000
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They are going to do what they call a grid search right off the coast of Key West, in between Key West and Cuba.
CNN Transcript - Breaking News: U.S. Military Searching for Missing Cuban Plane - September 19, 2000 2000
jeniffer32xg commented on the word grid
Just for fun
February 15, 2010