Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A place in which business, clerical, or professional activities are conducted.
- noun The administrative personnel, executives, or staff working in such a place.
- noun A subdivision of a governmental department.
- noun A major executive division of a government.
- noun A position of authority, duty, or trust given to a person, as in a government or corporation.
- noun Public position.
- noun A duty or function assigned to or assumed by someone: synonym: function.
- noun A service or beneficial act done for another.
- noun Ecclesiastical A ceremony, rite, or service, usually prescribed by liturgy, especially.
- noun The canonical hours.
- noun A prayer service in the Anglican Church, such as Morning or Evening Prayer.
- noun A ceremony, rite, or service for a special purpose, especially the Office of the Dead.
- noun Chiefly British The parts of a house, such as the laundry and kitchen, in which servants carry out household work.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To perform in the way of office or service; serve; perform; transact.
- To intrust with an office; place in an office.
- To move by means of office or by exercise of official authority.
- noun Service; duty or duties to the performance of which a person is appointed; function assigned by a superior authority; hence, employment; business; that which one undertakes or is expected to do.
- noun That which is performed or is intended or assigned to be done by a particular thing, or which anything is fitted to perform or customarily performs; function.
- noun A position or situation to which certain duties are attached; a post the possession of which imposes certain duties upon the possessor and confers authority for their performance; a post or place held by an officer, an official, or a functionary.
- noun Specifically, a position of authority under a government: as, a man in office; to accept office.
- noun In old English law, jurisdiction; bailiwick: as, a constable sworn “to prevent all bloodshed, outcries, affrays, and rescouses [rescues] done within his office.”
- noun Inquest of office (which see, under
inquest ). - noun A building or room in which one transacts business or discharges his professional duties: as, a lawyers or doctor's office; the office of a factory or lumber-yard; especially, a place where public business is transacted: as, the county clerk's office; the post-office; the war-office: also (in the plural), the apartments wherein domestics discharge the several duties attached to a house, as kitchens, pantries, brew-houses, and the like, along with outhouses, such as the stables, etc., of a mansion or palace, or the barns, cow-houses, etc., of a farm.
- noun The persons collectively who transact business in an office: often applied specifically to an insurance company: as, a fire-office.
- noun An act of good or ill voluntarily tendered (usually in a good sense); service: usually in the plural.
- noun Eccles.: The prescribed order or form for a service of the church, or for devotional use, or the service so prescribed; especially, the forms for the canonical hours collectively (the divine office): as, the communion office, the confirmation office, the office of prime, etc.; to recite office.
- noun In the Mozarabic and in some old Gallican and monastic liturgies, in the Uses of Sarum and York, and in the Anglican Prayer-book of 1549, the introit. Also
officium . - noun In canon law, a benefice which carries no jurisdiction with it.
- noun Mark of authority; badge of office.
- noun See the qualifying words.
- noun Synonyms Business, Pursuit, etc. (see
occupation ), post, situation, place, capacity.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- transitive verb obsolete To perform, as the duties of an office; to discharge.
- noun That which a person does, either voluntarily or by appointment, for, or with reference to, others; customary duty, or a duty that arises from the relations of man to man.
- noun A special duty, trust, charge, or position, conferred by authority and for a public purpose; a position of trust or authority
- noun A charge or trust, of a sacred nature, conferred by God himself.
- noun That which is performed, intended, or assigned to be done, by a particular thing, or that which anything is fitted to perform; a function; -- answering to
duty in intelligent beings. - noun The place where any kind of business or service for others is transacted; a building, suite of rooms, or room in which public officers or workers in any organization transact business
- noun The company or corporation, or persons collectively, whose place of business is in an office.
- noun engraving The apartments or outhouses in which the domestics discharge the duties attached to the service of a house, as kitchens, pantries, stables, etc.
- noun (Eccl.) Any service other than that of ordination and the Mass; any prescribed religious service.
- noun Same as
Inquisition , n., 3. - noun Same as def. 7 above.
- noun (R. C. Ch.) an office recited in honor of the Virgin Mary.
- noun an officer; one who has a specific office or duty to perform.
- noun (Law) an authenticated or certified copy of a record, from the proper office. See Certified copies, under
Copy . - noun (Law) the finding of an inquest of office. See under
Inquest .
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Replacing the receiver, he thought urgently of some second-choice number where there would be no answer out of office hours and decided on his solicitor: Those buggers hardly ever turned up even _within _office hours.
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A passage frown Jerome's _Epistle to Evangelus_ is often quoted in works on church government, as equalising, or nearly so, the office of bishop and presbyter; but the drift of the argument seems to be, to show that the _site_ of a bishop's see, be it great or small, important or otherwise, does not affect the episcopal _office_.
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At the office -- at the _office_, mind -- I received a letter from
Love's Shadow Ada Leverson 1897
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No person shall be capable of acting in any office Civil, Military [or Ecclesiastical] * The Qualifications of all not otherwise directed, shall be an oath of fidelity to state and the having given no bribe to obtain their office* who shall have given any bribe to obtain such office, or who shall not previously take an oath of fidelity to the state.
Public Papers 1775
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This was refused at the office, unless he would pay for office* copies.
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We provide that a Cabinet minister shall hold his office, _not for a fixed term, not until the Senate shall consent to his removal, but as long as the power that appoints him holds the office_. "
Twenty Years of Congress, Volume 2 (of 2) From Lincoln to Garfield, with a Review of the Events Which Led to the Political Revolution of 1860 James Gillespie Blaine 1861
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III. iii.64 (386,9) season'd office] All _office established_ and
Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies Samuel Johnson 1746
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More and more, the term office defines a state of activity rather than a place.
Experiential Marketing BERND H. SCHMITT 1999
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More and more, the term office defines a state of activity rather than a place.
Experiential Marketing BERND H. SCHMITT 1999
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Sanford not only has no political future, every day he remains in office is another black eye to the GOP in a region where they cannot afford it.
notanotherjazzpoet commented on the word office
I hereby declare that office remains on my Verbed! list only as an example of the travesty of modern advertising's fascination with faux neologisms.
February 9, 2007