New Definition–adjective | 1. | of recent origin, production, purchase, etc.; having but lately come or been brought into being: a new book. | | 2. | of a kind now existing or appearing for the first time; novel: a new concept of the universe. | | 3. | having but lately or but now come into knowledge: a new chemical element. | | 4. | unfamiliar or strange (often fol. by to): ideas new to us; to visit new lands. | | 5. | having but lately come to a place, position, status, etc.: a reception for our new minister. | | 6. | unaccustomed (usually fol. by to): people new to such work. | | 7. | coming or occurring afresh; further; additional: new gains. | | 8. | fresh or unused: to start a new sheet of paper. | | 9. | (of physical or moral qualities) different and better: The vacation made a new man of him. | | 10. | other than the former or the old: a new era; in the New World. | | 11. | being the later or latest of two or more things of the same kind: the New Testament; a new edition of Shakespeare. | | 12. | (initial capital letter ) (of a language) in its latest known period, esp. as a living language at the present time: New High German. | –adverb | 13. | recently or lately (usually used in combination): The valley was green with new-planted crops. | | 14. | freshly; anew or afresh (often used in combination): roses new washed with dew; new-mown hay. | –noun | 15. | something that is new; a new object, quality, condition, etc.: Ring out the old, ring in the new. | | From Dictionary
York Definition–noun | 1. | a member of the royal house of England that ruled from 1461 to 1485. | | 2. | 1st Duke of (Edmund of Langley ), 1341–1402, progenitor of the house of York (son of Edward III). | | 5. | Ancient, Eboracum. a city in North Yorkshire, in NE England, on the Ouse: the capital of Roman Britain; cathedral. 102,700. | | 6. | a city in SE Pennsylvania: meeting of the Continental Congress 1777–78. 44,619. | | 7. | an estuary in E Virginia, flowing SE into Chesapeake Bay. 40 mi. (64 km) long. | | 8. | Cape, a cape at the NE extremity of Australia. | | From Dictionary
Institute Definition–verb (used with objec
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t) | 1. | to set up; establish; organize: to institute a government. | | 2. | to inaugurate; initiate; start: to institute a new course in American literature. | | 3. | to set in operation: to institute a lawsuit. | | 4. | to bring into use or practice: to institute laws. | | 5. | to establish in an office or position. | | 6. | Ecclesiastical. to assign to or invest with a
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spiritual charge, as of a parish. | –noun | 7. | a society or organization for carrying on a particular work, as of a literary, scientific, or educational character. | | 8. | the building occupied by such a society. | | 9. | Education. | a. | an institution, generally beyond the secondary school level, devoted to instruction in technical subjects, usually separate but sometimes organized as a part of a university. | | b. | a unit within a university organized for advanced instruction and research in a relatively narrow field of subject matter. | | c. | a short instructional program set up for a special group interested in a specialized field or subject. | | | 10. | an established principle, law, custom, or organization. | | 11. | institutes, | a. | an elementary textbook of law designed for beginners. | | b. | (initial capital letter ) Also called Institutes of Justinian. an elementary treatise on Roman law in four books, forming one of the four divisions of the Corpus Juris Civilis. | | | 12. | something instituted. | | From Dictionary
Technology Definition–noun | 1. | the branch of knowledge that deals with the creation and use of technical means and their interrelation with life, society, and the environment, drawing upon such subjects as industrial arts, engineering, applied science, and pure science. | | 2. | the terminology of an art, science, etc.; technical nomenclature. | | 3. | a technological process, invention, method, or the like. | | 4. | the sum of the ways in which social groups provide themselves with the material objects of their civilization. | | From Dictionary
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