Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun One who receives or entertains guests in a social or official capacity.
- noun A person who manages an inn or hotel.
- noun One that furnishes facilities and resources for a function or event.
- noun The emcee or interviewer on a radio or television program.
- noun Biology The animal or plant on which or in which another organism lives.
- noun Medicine The recipient of a transplanted tissue or organ.
- noun A computer or other device providing data or services that a remote computer can access by means of a network or modem.
- noun A computer that is connected to a TCP/IP network, such as the Internet.
- transitive verb To serve as host to or at.
- transitive verb To provide software that offers data or services, hardware, or both over a computer network.
- noun An army.
- noun A great number; a multitude. synonym: multitude.
- noun The consecrated bread or wafer of the Eucharist.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To assemble or move as an army.
- noun An army; a multitude of men organized for war.
- noun Any great number or multitude.
- To administer the sacrament to.
- noun Same as
hoast . - noun One who receives and entertains another in his own house, whether gratuitously or for pay; an entertainer; specifically, the landlord of a public house or inn: the correlative of guest.
- noun An animal or a plant in relation to a parasite habitually dwelling in or upon it. The correlative term, in either case, is guest. See commensal, guest, inquiline, parasite, hyperparasite.
- noun In zoölogy the term is a very general and comprehensive one, since almost all animals are infested, or liable to infestation, by parasites of some kind; and some parasites are themselves hosts of others.
- noun In mineralogy, a mineral which incloses another.
- noun One who is entertained by another as his guest; a guest.
- noun An inn; a lodging.
- To lodge, as at an inn; receive entertainment; be a guest.
- To give entertainment to; receive as a guest.
- noun An offering; a sacrifice.
- noun In the Western Ch.: The sacramental victim in the eucharist; Christ offered under the species of bread and wine, or under either species separately.
- noun One of the pieces of bread used for consecration in the mass or eucharist; au altar-bread, oblate, or wafer.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun (R. C. Ch.) The consecrated wafer, believed to be the body of Christ, which in the Mass is offered as a sacrifice; also, the bread before consecration.
- noun An army; a number of men gathered for war.
- noun Any great number or multitude; a throng.
- noun One who receives or entertains another, whether gratuitously or for compensation; one from whom another receives food, lodging, or entertainment; a landlord.
- noun (Biol.) Any animal or plant affording lodgment or subsistence to a parasitic or commensal organism. .
- intransitive verb obsolete To lodge at an inn; to take up entertainment.
- transitive verb obsolete To give entertainment to.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A
multitude of peoplearrayed as anarmy ; used also in religious senses, as: Heavenly host (of angels) - noun A large number of items; a large
inventory . - noun Catholicism The
consecrated bread orwafer of theEucharist . - noun A person who allows a
guest , particularly into the host’s home. - noun A person or organization responsible for
running anevent . - noun A
moderator ormaster of ceremonies for aperformance . - noun computing, Internet, Unix Any computer attached to a
network . - noun computing, networking A computer or software component that provides
services . - noun biology A
cell ororganism whichharbors another organism or biological entity, usually aparasite . - noun evolutionism, genetics An organism bearing certain
genetic material. - noun Consecrated bread such as that used in the Christian ceremony of the
Eucharist . - verb To perform the role of a host.
- verb obsolete, intransitive To
lodge at aninn .
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
Support
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Examples
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Who has not imagined to himself a country inn, where the traveller shall really feel _in_, and at home, and at his public-house, who was before at his private house; whose host is indeed a _host_, and a _lord_ of the
Excursions Henry David Thoreau 1839
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The nodes file has 2 columns, first one is the IP and the second is the hostname while read line do ip = ` echo $line | gawk - F ""'{print $1}' ` host = ` echo $line | gawk - F ""'{print $2}' ` pxeboot - a - O rhel5compute - r 28753 - S $host - e eth0 - N my_nis_domain - s console = ttyS0,115200n8r $ip done
LinuxQuestions.org 2009
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The word host implies that it's your party and you're supplying the food and drink.
Lisa Mirza Grotts: Summer Party Etiquette for Hosts and Guests Lisa Mirza Grotts 2011
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The term host is usually used for the larger (macro) of the two members of a symbiosis.
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The term host is usually used for the larger (macro) of the two members of a symbiosis.
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I use the term host to emphasize our being sojourners, or citizens of two Kingdoms / cultures simultaneously with responsibilities to each.
futuristguy 2008
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But, I know that our host is a Saké-loving guy, with tons of knowledge on the subject, but he's making it easy for the newbies:
LENNDEVOURS: 2009
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But, I know that our host is a Saké-loving guy, with tons of knowledge on the subject, but he's making it easy for the newbies:
Wine Blogging Wednesday #59 Announced: WBW #59: An Homage to Kushi no Kami 2009
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To succeed, a talk show host must perpetuate the notion that his or her listeners are victims, and the host is the vehicle by which they can become empowered.
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But, I know that our host is a Saké-loving guy, with tons of knowledge on the subject, but he's making it easy for the newbies:
oroboros commented on the word host
Contranymic in the sense of an individual vs. a multitude.
March 2, 2007
oroboros commented on the word host
Host is the Czech word for guest according to futilitycloset.com.
March 4, 2013
fbharjo commented on the word host
guest and host (and also hostile, hospice, hospital and hospitable ) are from the same Indo-European root, ghos-ti- , a stranger or 'someone with whom one has reciprocal duties of hospitality.'
Can it get much stranger? Give the outside a ghost (ghost is derived from the IE root gheis- - spirit, breathe) of a chance!
March 4, 2013