- garbage
- noun Etymology: Middle English, offal Date: 15th century 1. a. food waste b. discarded or useless material 2. a. trash 1b b. inaccurate or useless data
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
Garbage — … Википедия
Garbage — live à Copenhague le 1er juin 2005 Pays d’origine Madison, Wis … Wikipédia en Français
Garbage — may refer to:*Waste, also known as trash or junk unwanted or undesired material **Food waste (in American English) **Waste management, collection, transport, processing or disposal of waste *Garbage (band), a rock music band ** Garbage (album),… … Wikipedia
Garbage — puede referirse a: Garbage (banda), una banda estadounidense/escocesa de rock alternativo Garbage (álbum), álbum debut homónimo de Garbage Garbage Video, dvd musical de Garbage Garbage Pail Kids, una serie de tarjetas comerciales Garbage plate,… … Wikipedia Español
Garbage — Gar bage (?; 48), n. [OE. also garbash, perh. orig., that which is purged or cleansed away; cf. OF. garber to make fine, neat, OHG. garawan to make ready, prepare, akin to E. garb dress; or perh. for garbleage, fr. garble; or cf. OF. garbage tax… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Garbage — Marker, Manson, Erik … Deutsch Wikipedia
garbage — gar‧bage [ˈgɑːbɪdʒ ǁ ˈgɑːr ] noun [uncountable] COMPUTING information in a computer memory that is no longer needed or wanted: • These areas of dead memory are called garbage … Financial and business terms
garbage — [gär′bij] n. [ME, entrails of fowls < ?] 1. spoiled or waste food that is thrown away 2. any worthless, unnecessary, or offensive matter [literary garbage] garbagey adj. garbagy … English World dictionary
Garbage — Gar bage, v. t. To strip of the bowels; to clean. Pilchards . . . are garbaged. Holland. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Garbage — es un grupo de rock, procedente de Winsconsin, Estados Unidos … Enciclopedia Universal
garbage — early 15c., giblets of a fowl, waste parts of an animal, later confused with GARBLE (Cf. garble) in its sense of siftings, refuse. Perhaps some senses derive from O.Fr. garbe a bundle of sheaves, entrails, from P.Gmc. *garba (Cf. Du. garf, Ger.… … Etymology dictionary