dashing |
bold and gallant; exciting; daring. [2 definitions] |
dash light |
a light used to illuminate the instrument panel of a motor vehicle, esp. at night. |
dassent |
(dialectal) a regional pronunciation of "darest not," "darest" being an older second person singular, present tense form of the verb "dare." |
dastard |
a coward who sneakily does harm. [2 definitions] |
dastardly |
cowardly; mean; sneaky. |
dasymeter |
an instrument for measuring gas density. |
dasyure |
any of various small nocturnal Australian marsupials, including the Tasmanian devil, that eat insects or flesh. |
data |
(used with a sing. or pl. verb) plural form of datum, an individual piece of information that is used to draw a conclusion. |
database |
a large collection of information arranged for quick retrieval, updating, or the like, esp. such a collection in a computer. |
data processing |
the recording, organizing, and storing of information, esp. by computers, in accordance with strictly defined procedures. |
data processor |
a person who compiles data or enters data into a computer for processing. [2 definitions] |
data set |
a collection of data records to be analyzed. |
date1 |
a specific day or point in time, usu. described by indicating the month, day, and year. [11 definitions] |
date2 |
the edible fruit of the date palm tree of the Middle East. |
dated |
having a date. [2 definitions] |
dateless |
having no date. [3 definitions] |
dateline |
at the beginning of a news article, a line giving the place and usu. the date of its origin. |
date line |
see "International Date Line." |
date palm |
a tall palm tree with a thick trunk, cultivated in tropical and desert regions for its dates. |
date rape |
the act of rape committed by a person who is on a date or in a date-like social situation with the victim. |
dative |
denoting, relating to, or in a grammatical case that usu. marks indirect objects. [2 definitions] |