monitorship
Variant of monitor
moni·tor (män′i tər)
noun
- a person who advises, warns, or cautions
- in some schools, a student chosen to help keep order, record attendance, etc.
- something that reminds or warns
- any of a family (Varanidae) of usually very large, flesh-eating lizards of Africa, S Asia, and Australia: from the notion that they warn of the presence of crocodiles
- ☆
Etymology: < the Monitor, first such ship, built in 1862
Historical a heavily armored warship with a low, flat deck and heavy guns fitted in one or more revolving turrets - ☆ a mounting for a nozzle that allows a stream of water to be played in any direction, as in fire fighting
- a person who monitors a foreign broadcast, etc.
- any of various devices for checking or regulating the performance of machines, aircraft, guided missiles, etc.
- an instrument for measuring radioactive contamination by means of the ionizing radiation being emitted
- Comput. a video screen for displaying data, graphic images, etc.
- Radio, TV a receiver or speaker, as in the control room of a broadcasting studio, for checking the quality of the transmission
Etymology: L < pp. of monere, to warn < IE *moni- < base *men-, to think > mind
transitive verb, intransitive verb
- to watch or check on (a person or thing) as a monitor
- to check on or regulate the performance of (a machine, airplane, etc.)
- to test for radioactive contamination with a monitor
- to listen in on (a foreign broadcast, telephone conversation, etc.) as for gathering political or military information
- Radio, TV to check the quality of (transmission) with or as with a monitor
Related Forms:
- monitorship mon′·i·tor·ship′ noun
Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2005 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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