command

command
I. verb Etymology: Middle English comanden, from Anglo-French cumander, from Vulgar Latin *commandare, alteration of Latin commendare to commit to one's charge — more at commend Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. to direct authoritatively ; order 2. to exercise a dominating influence over ; have command of: as a. to have at one's immediate disposal <
commands many resources
>
b. to demand or receive as one's due <
commands a high fee
>
c. to overlook or dominate from or as if from a strategic position <
a hill that commands the city
>
d. to have military command of as senior officer <
command a regiment
>
3. obsolete to order or request to be given intransitive verb 1. to have or exercise direct authority ; govern 2. to give orders 3. to be commander 4. to dominate as if from an elevated place • commandable adjective Synonyms: command, order, bid, enjoin, direct, instruct, charge mean to issue orders. command and order imply authority and usually some degree of formality and impersonality. command stresses official exercise of authority <
a general commanding troops
>
. order may suggest peremptory or arbitrary exercise <
ordered his employees about like slaves
>
. bid suggests giving orders peremptorily (as to children or servants) <
she bade him be seated
>
. enjoin implies giving an order or direction authoritatively and urgently and often with admonition or solicitude <
a sign enjoining patrons to be quiet
>
. direct and instruct both connote expectation of obedience and usually concern specific points of procedure or method, instruct sometimes implying greater explicitness or formality <
directed her assistant to hold all calls
>
<
the judge instructed the jury to ignore the remark
>
. charge adds to enjoin an implication of imposing as a duty or responsibility <
charged by the President with a secret mission
>
. II. noun Date: 15th century 1. a. an order given b. a signal that actuates a device (as a control mechanism in a spacecraft or one step in a computer); also the activation of a device by means of such a signal 2. a. the ability to control ; mastery b. the authority or right to command <
the officer in command
>
c. (1) the power to dominate (2) scope of vision d. facility in use <
a good command of French
>
e. control 1d <
a pitcher with good command of his curveball
>
3. the act of commanding 4. the personnel, area, or organization under a commander; specifically a unit of the United States Air Force higher than an air force 5. a position of highest usually military authority Synonyms: see power III. adjective Date: 1826 done on command or request <
a command performance
>

New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.

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  • command — vb Command, order, bid, enjoin, direct, instruct, charge mean to issue orders to someone to give, get, or do something. Command and order agree in stressing the idea of authority, command implying its more formal and official exercise {the… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • Command — may refer to: Command (computing), a statement in a computer language COMMAND.COM, the default operating system shell and command line interpreter for DOS Command (military formation), an organizational unit Command key, a modifier key on Apple… …   Wikipedia

  • Command HQ — Developer(s) Ozark Softscape Publisher(s) Microplay Software Designer(s) Danielle Bunten Berry …   Wikipedia

  • Command — Command  слово на английском языке (рус. Команда), являющееся названием компьютерных терминов: Command  шаблон проектирования, используемый при объектно ориентированном программировании, представляющий действие; COMMAND.COM … …   Википедия

  • Command — Com*mand , n. 1. An authoritative order requiring obedience; a mandate; an injunction. [1913 Webster] Awaiting what command their mighty chief Had to impose. Milton. [1913 Webster] 2. The possession or exercise of authority. [1913 Webster]… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Command (3M) — Command  торговая марка систем крепления, которые производятся международной компанией 3M. Продукция Command предназначена для закрепления на вертикальной поверхности предметов домашнего обихода и офисных принадлежностей. Уникальность… …   Википедия

  • command — ● command nom masculin (de commander) Personne au nom de laquelle on se porte acquéreur ou adjudicataire. ● command (homonymes) nom masculin (de commander) comment adverbe ⇒COMMAND, subst. masc. DR. Acquéreur réel sur le commandement de qui un… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Command — Com*mand (?; 61), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Commanded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Commanding}.] [OE. comaunden, commanden, OF. comander, F. commander, fr. L. com + mandare to commit to, to command. Cf. {Commend}, {Mandate}.] 1. To order with authority; to lay… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • command — [kə mand′, kəmänd′] vt. [ME commanden < OFr comander < VL * commandare < L com , intens. + mandare, to commit, entrust: see MANDATE] 1. to give an order or orders to; direct with authority 2. to have authority or jurisdiction over;… …   English World dictionary

  • command — I verb adjure, authorize, bid, call for, call upon, charge, compel, constrain, decree, demand, direct, direct imperatively, enact, exact, exercise authority, force, give directions, give orders, govern, have control, hominem iubere facere, homini …   Law dictionary

  • command — ► VERB 1) give an authoritative order. 2) be in charge of (a military unit). 3) dominate (a strategic position) from a superior height. 4) be in a position to receive or secure: emeralds command a high price. ► NOUN 1) an authoritative order. 2) …   English terms dictionary

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