| to introduce subtleties into or argue subtly about. |
| to expurgate (a written work) by removing or modifying passages considered vulgar or objectionable. |
core (kɔː) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | the central part of certain fleshy fruits, such as the apple or pear, consisting of the seeds and supporting parts |
| 2. | a. the central, innermost, or most essential part of something: the core of the argument |
| b. (as modifier): the core meaning | |
| 3. | a piece of magnetic material, such as soft iron, placed inside the windings of an electromagnet or transformer to intensify and direct the magnetic field |
| 4. | geology the central part of the earth, beneath the mantle, consisting mainly of iron and nickel, which has an inner solid part surrounded by an outer liquid part |
| 5. | a cylindrical sample of rock, soil, etc, obtained by the use of a hollow drill |
| 6. | shaped body of material (in metal casting usually of sand) supported inside a mould to form a cavity of predetermined shape in the finished casting |
| 7. | physics the region of a nuclear reactor in which the reaction takes place |
| 8. | a layer of wood serving as a backing for a veneer |
| 9. | computing |
| a. one of several processing units working in parallel in a computer | |
| b. a ferrite ring formerly used in a computer memory to store one bit of information | |
| c. short for core store | |
| d. (as modifier): core memory | |
| 10. | archaeol a lump of stone or flint from which flakes or blades have been removed |
| 11. | physics the nucleus together with all complete electron shells of an atom |
| —vb | |
| 12. | (tr) to remove the core from (fruit) |
| [C14: of uncertain origin] | |
| 'coreless | |
| —adj | |
| -core | |
| —n combining form | |
| 1. | indicating a type of popular music: dancecore |
| —adj combining form | |
| 2. | indicating the number of processing units working in parallel in a computer: dual-core |
core (kôr)
n.
The central or innermost part.
The part of a nuclear reactor where fission occurs.
core (kôr) Pronunciation Key
|
In geology, the central region of the Earth; it extends fourteen hundred to eighteen hundred miles from the Earth's center.
Note: The core is made primarily of iron and nickel and has two parts — an inner solid core and an outer liquid core.
Note: The mantle is the layer of the Earth that overlies the core.
core
n. Main storage or RAM. Dates from the days of ferrite-core memory; now archaic as techspeak most places outside IBM, but also still used in the Unix community and by old-time hackers or those who would sound like them. Some derived idioms are quite current; `in core', for example, means `in memory' (as opposed to `on disk'), and both core dump and the `core image' or `core file' produced by one are terms in favor. Some varieties of Commonwealth hackish prefer store.| CORE Congress of Racial Equality |