Rare Definition–adjective, rar⋅er, rar⋅est. | 1. | coming or occurring far apart in time; unusual; uncommon: a rare disease; His visits are rare occasions. | | 2. | thinly distributed over an area; few and widely separated: Lighthouses are rare on that part of the coast. | | 3. | having the component parts not closely compacted together; not dense: rare gases; lightheaded from the rare mountain air. | | 4. | unusually great: a rare display of courage. | | 5. | unusually excellent; admirable; fine: She showed rare tact in inviting them. | | From Dictionary
Item Definition–noun | 1. | a separate article or particular: 50 items on the list. | | 2. | a separate piece of information or news, as a short piece in a newspaper or broadcast. | | 3. | Slang. something suitable for a news paragraph or as a topic of gossip, esp. something that is sensational or scandalous: The bandleader and the new female singer are an item. | | 4. | a word formerly used in communications to represent the letter I. | | 5. | an admonition or warning. | | 6. | Older Use. an intimation or hint. | –adverb | 7. | also; likewise (used esp. to introduce each article or statement in a list or series). | –verb (used with object) Archaic. | 8. | to set down or enter as an item, or by or in items. | | From Dictionary
Code Definition–noun | 1. | a system for communication by telegraph, heliograph, etc., in which long and short sounds, light flashes, etc., are used to symbolize the content of a message: Morse code. | | 2. | a system used for brevity or secrecy of communication, in which arbitrarily chosen words, letters, or symbols are assigned definite meanings. | | 3. | any set of standards set forth and enforced by a local government agency for the protection of public safety, health, etc., as in the structural safety of buildings (building code), health requirements for plumbing, ventilation, etc. (sanitary or health code), and the specifications for fire escapes or exits (fire code). | | 4. | a systematically arranged collection or compendium of laws, rules, or regulations. | | 5. | any authoritative, general, systematic, and written statement of the legal rules and principles applicable in a given legal order to one or more broad areas of life. | | 6. | a word, letter, number, or other symbol used in a code system to mark, represent, or identify something: The code on the label shows the date of manufacture. | | 7. | Computers. the symbolic arrangement of statements or instructions in a computer program in which letters, digits, etc. are represented as binary numbers; the set of instructions in such a program: That program took 3000 lines of code. Compare ASCII, object code, source code. | | 8. | any system or collection of rules and regulations: a gentleman's code of behavior. | | 9. | Medicine/Medical. a directive or alert to a hospital team assigned to emergency resuscitation of patients. | | 11. | Linguistics. | a. | the system of rules shared by the participants in an act of communication, making possible the transmission and interpretation of messages. | | b. | (in sociolinguistic theory) one of two distinct styles of language use that differ in degree of explicitness and are sometimes thought to be correlated with differences in social class. Compare elaborated code, restricted code. | | –verb (used with object) | 12. | to translate (a message) into a code; encode. | | 13. | to arrange or enter (laws or statutes) in a code. | | 14. | Computers. to translate (a program) into language that can be communicated to the computer. | –verb (used without object) | 15. | Genetics. to specify the amino acid sequence of a protein by the sequence of nucleotides comprising the gene for that protein: a gene that codes for the production of insulin. | | From Dictionary
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