| 1. | Usually, contents.
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| 2. | something that is to be expressed through some medium, as speech, writing, or any of various arts: a poetic form adequate to a poetic content. |
| 3. | significance or profundity; meaning: a clever play that lacks content. |
| 4. | substantive information or creative material viewed in contrast to its actual or potential manner of presentation: publishers, record companies, and other content providers; a flashy Web site, but without much content. |
| 5. | that which may be perceived in something: the latent versus the manifest content of a dream. |
| 6. | Philosophy, Logic. the sum of the attributes or notions comprised in a given conception; the substance or matter of cognition. |
| 7. | power of containing; holding capacity: The bowl's content is three quarts. |
| 8. | volume, area, or extent; size. |
| 9. | the amount contained. |
| 10. | Linguistics. the system of meanings or semantic values specific to a language (opposed to expression ). |
| 11. |
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n-tent]
| 1. | satisfied with what one is or has; not wanting more or anything else. |
| 2. | British. agreeing; assenting. |
| 3. | Archaic. willing. |
| 4. | to make content: These things content me. |
| 5. | the state or feeling of being contented; contentment: His content was threatened. |
| 6. | (in the British House of Lords) an affirmative vote or voter. |
content con·tent (kŏn'těnt')
n.
Something contained, as in a receptacle.
The proportion of a specified substance present in something else, as of protein in a food.
The subject matter or essential meaning of something, especially a dream.