jem]
noun, verb, gemmed, gem⋅ming, adjective | 1. | a cut and polished precious stone or pearl fine enough for use in jewelry. |
| 2. | something likened to or prized as such a stone because of its beauty or worth: His painting was the gem of the collection. |
| 3. | a person held in great esteem or affection. |
| 4. | muffin (def. 1). |
| 5. | British Printing. a 4-point type of a size between brilliant and diamond. |
| 6. | to adorn with or as with gems; begem. |
| 7. | Jewelry. noting perfection or very high quality: gem color; a gem ruby. |

| GEM abbr. ground-effect machine |
| ground-ef·fect machine (ground'ĭ-fěkt') n. Abbr. GEM See air-cushion vehicle. [From ground effect, a peculiarity of certain aircraft when landing, in which a cushion of air directed off the wings prevents touchdown.] |
GEM operating system
One of the first commercially available GUIs. Borrowing heavily from the Macintosh WIMP-style interface it was available for both the IBM compatible market (being packaged with Amstrad's original PC series) and more successfully for the Atari ST range. The PC version was produced by Digital Research (more famous for DR-DOS, their MS-DOS clone), and was not developed very far. The Atari version, however, continued to be developed until the early 1990s and the later versions supported 24-bit colour modes, full colour icons and a nice looking sculpted 3D interface.
(1997-01-10)
GEM
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