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Sampler

 - 9 dictionary results

sam⋅pler

[sam-pler, sahm-]
–noun
1. a person who samples.
2. a piece of cloth embroidered with various stitches, serving to show a beginner's skill in needlework.
3. a collection of samples, selections, etc.: a sampler of French poetry.
4. an electronic device that digitally encodes and stores samples of sound.

Origin:
1250–1300; ME samplere < OF essamplere, exemplaire < L exemplārium exemplar

sam⋅ple

[sam-puhl, sahm-] noun, adjective, verb, -pled, -pling.
–noun
1. a small part of anything or one of a number, intended to show the quality, style, or nature of the whole; specimen.
2. Statistics. a subset of a population: to study a sample of the total population.
3. a sound of short duration, as a musical tone or a drumbeat, digitally stored in a synthesizer for playback.
–adjective
4. serving as a specimen: a sample piece of cloth.
–verb (used with object)
5. to take a sample or samples of; test or judge by a sample.

Origin:
1250–1300; ME < OF essample. See example


1. See example.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source Link To Sampler
sam·pler   (sām'plər)   
n.  
  1. One who is employed to take and appraise samples, as of a food product.

  2. A mechanical device that is used to obtain and analyze samples.

  3. A decorative piece of cloth embroidered with various designs or mottoes in a variety of stitches, serving as an example of skill at needlework.

    1. A representative collection or selection: a sampler of American short-story writers.

    2. A variety; an assortment.

  4. An electronic device used to copy and digitally manipulate a segment from an audio recording for use in a new recording.


[Senses 3 and 4, partly Middle English, model (from Anglo-Norman *essamplur) and partly short for Middle English ensampler (from Anglo-Norman ensamplour), both from Late Latin exemplārium, model, copy, from Latin, copy; see exemplar.]
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Main Entry:  sampler
Part of Speech:  n
Definition:  See samplist
Dictionary.com's 21st Century Lexicon
Copyright © 2003-2009 Dictionary.com, LLC
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Cultural Dictionary

sample

In statistics, a group drawn from a larger population and used to estimate the characteristics of the whole population.

Note: Opinion polls use small groups of people, often selected at random, as a sample of the opinions of the general public.
The American Heritage® New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition
Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

sample 
c.1300, "something which confirms a proposition or statement," from Anglo-Fr. saumple, aphetic of O.Fr. essample, from L. exemplum "a sample" (see example). Meaning "small quantity (of something) from which the general quality (of the whole) may be inferred" (usually in a commercial sense) is recorded from 1428; sense of "specimen for scientific sampling" is from 1878. The verb meaning "to test by taking a sample" is from 1767.

sampler 
"embroidery specimen by a beginner to show skill," 1523, from sample (q.v.), probably transf. from meaning "piece of embroidery serving as a pattern to be copied," from the notion of "an example to be imitated" (c.1300).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Medical Dictionary

Main Entry: sam·ple
Pronunciation: 'sam-p&l
Function: noun
1 : a representative part or a single item from a larger whole or groupespecially when presented for inspection or shown as evidence of quality : SPECIMEN sample>
2 : a finite part of a statistical population whose properties are studied to gain information about the whole
Encyclopedia

sampler

embroidered panel of linen on which various types of stitches are demonstrated. The earliest extant European examples date from the 16th century. The original purpose of the sampler, in the period before embroidery pattern books became available in 1523, was to demonstrate a repertory of embroidery stitches that might be used in the future. In the earliest dated specimen (1598), different motifs are arranged in a somewhat random fashion on linen. In the 17th century both the function of the sampler and its appearance changed. A school exercise rather than a repertory of stitches, it was dated and signed with the name of the pupil and sometimes of the teacher as well. It was, moreover, a work of art, executed as an end in itself. In the 17th century it was usual to work rows of stitches across the width of a long, oblong band; from the early 18th century onward, samplers tended to become square in shape and to show an overall design for arranging the component stitches, though the old form also persisted. Texts were embroidered, framed with a symmetrical arrangement of motifs; scenes with houses and people were worked, approximating embroidered pictures; and, in the latter part of the century, maps, almanacs, and the like were also represented. Nineteenth-century samplers continued on similar lines, mainly on canvas.

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Encyclopedia Britannica, 2008. Encyclopedia Britannica Online.
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