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kerb

 - 6 dictionary results
Kerberos based SQL access
Reauthentication Support via ODBC, JDBC or ADO.NET
www.datadirect.com/kerberos
Kerberos
Secure, centralized authentication for Unix/Linux/Windows. White paper
www.centrify.com
The Original Curb System
Proven successful system since 1987 Low start-up, high profits, quality
www.kwikkerb.com

kerb

[kurb]
–noun, verb (used with object) British.
curb (defs. 1, 15).
Kerberos based SQL access
Reauthentication Support via ODBC, JDBC or ADO.NET
www.datadirect.com/kerberos
Kerberos
Secure, centralized authentication for Unix/Linux/Windows. White paper
www.centrify.com

curb

[kurb]
–noun
1. a rim, esp. of joined stones or concrete, along a street or roadway, forming an edge for a sidewalk.
2. anything that restrains or controls; a restraint; check.
3. an enclosing framework or border.
4. Also called curb bit. a bit used with a bridoon for control of a horse, to which a chain (curb chain) is hooked.
5. Also called curb market; British, kerb market, kerbstone market. a market, originally on the sidewalk or street, for the sale of securities not listed on a stock exchange. Compare American Stock Exchange.
6. the framework around the top of a well.
7. the arris between an upper and a lower slope on a gambrel or mansard roof.
8. a belt of metal, masonry, etc., for abutting a dome at its base.
9. (in a windmill) the track on which the cap turns.
10. Veterinary Pathology. a swelling on the lower part of the back of the hock of a horse, often causing lameness.
11. Engineering. the cutting edge at the bottom of a caisson.
12. Carpentry. purlin plate.
–verb (used with object)
13. to control as with a curb; restrain; check.
14. to cause to keep near the curb: Curb your dog.
15. to furnish with or protect by a curb.
16. to put a curb on (a horse).
Also, British, kerb (for defs. 1, 15).


Origin:
1250–1300; ME curb, courbe curved piece of wood (n.), stooped, hunchbacked (adj.) < AF curb, courb curved, bowed; OF < L curvus crooked, bent, curved. See curve


curb⋅a⋅ble, adjective
curbless, adjective
curblike, adjective


13. bridle, repress. See check.


13. encourage.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2010.
Cite This Source Link To kerb
kerb   (kûrb)   
n.   Chiefly British
Variant of curb.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
Word Origin & History

curb 
1477, "strap passing under the jaw of a horse," from O.Fr. courbe "curve, curb," from L. curvus, from curvare "bend" (see curve). Meaning "enclosed framework" is from 1511, probably originally with a notion of "curved;" extended to margins of garden beds 1731; to "margin of stone between a sidewalk and road" 1836 (sometimes spelled kerb). The verb (1530) is from the notion of putting a curb on a horse; fig. sense first attested 1588.

kerb 
1664, a variant of curb (q.v.), preferred British spelling in certain specialized senses, especially "edging of stone on a sidewalk" (1805).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Medical Dictionary

Main Entry: curb
Pronunciation: 'k&rb
Function: noun
: a swelling on the back of the hind leg of a horse just behind the lowest part of the hock jointthat is due to strain or rupture of the ligament and generally causes lameness
Merriam-Webster's Medical Dictionary, © 2002 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
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The Original Curb System
Proven successful system since 1987 Low start-up, high profits, quality
www.kwikkerb.com
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