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Phone Definition–noun, verb (used with object), verb (used without object), phoned, phon·ing. | From Dictionary
System Definition–noun | 1. | an assemblage or combination of things or parts forming a complex or unitary whole: a mountain system; a railroad system. |
| 2. | any assemblage or set of correlated members: a system of currency; a system of shorthand characters. |
| 3. | an ordered and comprehensive assemblage of facts, principles, doctrines, or the like in a particular field of knowledge or thought: a system of philosophy. |
| 4. | a coordinated body of methods or a scheme or plan of procedure; organizational scheme: a system of government. |
| 5. | any formulated, regular, or special method or plan of procedure: a system of marking, numbering, or measuring; a winning system at bridge. |
| 6. | due method or orderly manner of arrangement or procedure: There is no system in his work. |
| 8. | Astronomy. | a. | a number of heavenly bodies associated and acting together according to certain natural laws: the solar system. |
| b. | a hypothesis or theory of the disposition and arrangements of the heavenly bodies by which their phenomena, motions, changes, etc., are explained: the Ptolemaic system; the Copernican system. |
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| 9. | Biology. | a. | an assemblage of organs or related tissues concerned with the same function: the nervous system; the digestive system. |
| b. | the entire human or animal body considered as a functioning unit: an ingredient toxic to the system. |
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| 10. | one's psychological makeup, esp. with reference to desires or preoccupations: to get something out of one's system. |
| 11. | a method or scheme of classification: the Linnean system of plants. |
| 12. | (sometimes initial capital letter ) the prevailing structure or organization of society, business, or politics or of society in general; establishment (usually prec. by the): to work within the system instead of trying to change it. |
| 13. | Geology. a major division of rocks comprising sedimentary deposits and igneous masses formed during a single geologic period. |
| 14. | Physical Chemistry. a combination of two or more phases, as a binary system, each of which consists of one or more substances, that is attaining or is in equilibrium. |
| 15. | Computers. a working combination of hardware, software, and data communications devices. |
| 16. | Checkers. either of the two groups of 16 playing squares on four alternate columns. |
| From Dictionary
Related topics from BritannicaComputers and Information Systems Two forces dominated developments in the computer industry in 1995--the arrival of Microsoft Corp.'s new Windows 95 personal computer (PC) operating system and the overnight ascendancy of the ...
Information Processing and Information Systems Sweeping change marked the U.S. computer industry in 1994 as longtime players exited the stage and rival systems struggled to dominate the next generation of personal computer (PC) operating systems ...
Computers and Information Systems In 2005 people were the most wirelessly connected ever. Cellular phones were the most common electronic gadget in the world, with about 700 million expected to be sold globally in 2005. According to ...
telephone and telephone system In the United States, interconnection of mobile radio transmitters and receivers (transceivers) with the PSTN began in 1946, with the introduction of mobile telephone service (MTS) by AT&T. The MTS ...
police Audio surveillance, or electronic eavesdropping, became practical for obtaining evidence and investigating leads after the development of magnetic recording in the early 20th century. Among the ...
telephone and telephone system Although cellular radio systems provide a high degree of mobility within a given service area, they do so at the expense of providing voice-only service usually at a significant monthly fee. In ...
telecommunication In FDMA the goal is to divide the frequency spectrum into slots and then to separate the signals of different users by placing them in separate frequency slots. The difficulty is that the frequency ...
Crime, Law Enforcement, and Penology Booming economic growth in China brought with it an unwelcome increase in economic crime. According to Chinese officials, 20,000 cases of embezzlement and corruption were reported in the first six ...
Computers and Information Systems The Web went wireless in 2000. Web-enabled digital wireless telephones and PDAs were developed that could use special browsing software to download information such as news stories, stock prices, ...
The Wireless Revolution In Helsinki, Fin., gamblers are getting their national lottery tickets by mobile telephone. In Hull, Eng., drivers are paying for their parking spaces with their mobile phones. In Tokyo people are ...
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