file
91filé — also file noun Etymology: Louisiana French, from French, past participle of filer to twist, spin Date: 1806 powdered young leaves of sassafras used to thicken soups or stews …
92file — fish teeth arranged in the labio lingual direction, e.g. in sharks. Such teeth are at different developmental stages and are derived from the same tooth bud position, cf. row, diagonal file and tooth row …
93file — n. [A.S. fil, feo, file] (ARTHROPODA: Insecta) A filelike, rough ridge on the ventral side of the tegmen, near the base, that functions as a part of the stridulating mechanism in crickets and long horned grasshoppers …
94file — 1. noun a) A collection of papers collated and archived together. The troops marched in Indian file. b) An aggregation of data on a storage device, identified …
95file — 1fi·le s.m.inv. ES ingl. {{wmetafile0}} TS inform. insieme di informazioni, dati o comandi logicamente correlati, raccolti sotto un unico nome e registrati, per mezzo di un programma di elaborazione o di scrittura, nella memoria di un computer… …
96file — Any data that is stored by a computer in a form that is accessible by disk. It can normally a program, text, or data for a program. Most BBS s will allow you to send or receive a file. See also download, upload …
97file 13 — the garbage can or wastebasket This letter goes in file 13 in the can in the corner …
98File — An ISO term. A set of related records treated as a unit. A file consists of records. Almost all the data base is kept in files. For example a table in a computer system is normally stored in the data base as one or more files. Fields are… …
99File n — An ISO term. The actual or abbreviated name of the file being accessed. 17x …
100file v — A secretary for a hardware store has to file more than nails. fillet n …