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Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.03 sec. |
open(1) To engage a disk or tape file for reading and writing. The open procedure "locks on" to an existing file. Contrast with close. open 1. Nautical free from navigational hazards, such as ice, sunken ships, etc. 2. Music a. (of a violin or guitar string) not stopped with the finger b. (of a pipe, such as an organ pipe) not closed at either end c. (of a note) played on such a string or pipe 3. Commerce a. in operation; active b. unrestricted; unlimited 4. (of a wound) exposed to the air 5. (esp of the large intestine) free from obstruction 6. Chess (of a file) having no pawns on it 7. Maths (of a set) containing points whose neighbourhood consists of other points of the same set 8. Computing (of software or a computer system) designed to an internationally agreed standard in order to allow communication between computers, irrespective of size, maufacturer, etc. open [′ō·pən] (electricity) Condition in which conductors are separated so that current cannot pass. Break or discontinuity in a circuit which can normally pass a current.
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Sharon Presley, reviewing Walter Block's Defending the Undefendable Armenia's undefendable position at a strategic crossroad was determinative, as was its dual heritage of western Christian traditions and eastern social structures, the latter preserved into the seventeenth century as hereditary church offices. ``I'm not going to be in the business of defending the undefendable, and what is more I do not personally believe it is appropriate for the president or the vice president of the United States to directly solicit contributions,'' Torricelli said. |
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