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Swift

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swift

1. any bird of the families Apodidae and Hemiprocnidae, such as Apus apus (common swift) of the Old World: order Apodiformes. They have long narrow wings and spend most of the time on the wing
2. a variety of domestic fancy pigeon originating in Egypt and Syria and having an appearance somewhat similar to a swift
3. any of certain North American lizards of the genera Sceloporus and Uta that can run very rapidly: family Iguanidae (iguanas)
4. the main cylinder in a carding machine
5. an expanding circular frame used to hold skeins of silk, wool, etc.

Swift

1. Graham Colin. born 1949, British writer: his novels include Waterland (1983), Last Orders (1996), which won the Booker prize, and The Light of Day (2002)
2. Jonathan. 1667--1745, Anglo-Irish satirist and churchman, who became dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin, in 1713. His works include A Tale of a Tub (1704) and Gulliver's Travels (1726)
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

Swift

(religion, spiritualism, and occult)

A planet is said to be swift when it appears to be moving faster than average. Because of its elliptical orbit, the Moon, especially, can move noticeably more slowly or more rapidly than its average of 13°10’ per 24-hour period.

The Astrology Book, Second Edition © 2003 Visible Ink Press®. All rights reserved.

swift

In prestressing, the reel or turntable on which the tendons are placed for convenience in handling and placement.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Swift

(1) A programming language from Apple for creating macOS and iOS applications. Introduced in 2014, Swift supports Apple's traditional language and interfaces for desktop and mobile development (Objective-C, Cocoa and Cocoa Touch). Swift added constructs to make program statements clearer; for example, defining non-changing variables as a "constant" type. "Tuples" enable compound values to be passed to functions, and "optionals" provide a safer way to support variables that are empty. See Objective-C.

(2) (SWIFT, La Hulpe, Belgium, www.swift.com) An industry cooperative that provides a standard format for transmitting payments, stock transactions, letters of credit and other financial messages to more than 11,000 institutions around the world. Founded in 1973 as the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, millions of transactions worth more than $100 billion dollars are sent each day with an average transit time of 20 seconds. Working like a bank routing number, a SWIFT code is widely used to transfer funds between banks.
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