post

post
I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old English, from Latin postis; probably akin to Latin por- forward and to Latin stare to stand — more at portend, stand Date: before 12th century 1. a piece (as of timber or metal) fixed firmly in an upright position especially as a stay or support ; pillar, column 2. a pole or stake set up to mark or indicate something; especially a pole that marks the starting or finishing point of a horse race 3. a metallic fitting attached to an electrical device (as a storage battery) for convenience in making connections 4. a. goalpost b. a football passing play in which the receiver runs downfield before turning towards the middle of the field 5. the metal stem of a pierced earring II. transitive verb Date: 1633 1. a. to publish, announce, or advertise by or as if by use of a placard b. to denounce by public notice c. to enter on a public listing d. to forbid (property) to trespassers under penalty of legal prosecution by notices placed along the boundaries e. score <
posted a 70 in the final round
>
2. to affix to a usual place (as a wall) for public notices ; placard 3. to publish (as a message) in an online forum (as an electronic bulletin board) III. noun Etymology: Middle French poste relay station, courier, from Old Italian posta relay station, from feminine of posto, past participle of porre to place, from Latin ponere — more at position Date: 1507 1. obsolete courier 2. archaic a. one of a series of stations for keeping horses for relays b. the distance between any two such consecutive stations ; stage 3. chiefly British a. a nation's organization for handling mail; also the mail handled b. (1) a single dispatch of mail (2) letter 2a c. post office d. postbox 4. something (as a message) that is published online IV. verb Date: 1533 intransitive verb 1. to travel with post-horses 2. to ride or travel with haste ; hurry 3. to rise from the saddle and return to it in rhythm with a horse's trot transitive verb 1. archaic to dispatch in haste 2. mail <
post a letter
>
3. a. to transfer or carry from a book of original entry to a ledger b. to make transfer entries in 4. to make familiar with a subject ; inform <
kept her posted on the latest gossip
>
V. adverb Date: 1549 with post-horses ; express VI. noun Etymology: Middle French poste, from Old Italian posto, from past participle of porre to place Date: 1598 1. a. the place at which a soldier is stationed; especially a sentry's beat or station b. a station or task to which one is assigned c. the place at which a body of troops is stationed ; camp d. a local subdivision of a veterans' organization e. one of two bugle calls sounded (as in the British army) at tattoo 2. a. an office or position to which a person is appointed b. an area on a basketball court that is located just outside the free throw lane usually near the basket; also the offensive position of a player occupying the post 3. a. trading post, settlement b. a trading station on the floor of a stock exchange VII. transitive verb Date: 1683 1. a. to station in a given place <
guards were posted at the doors
>
b. to carry ceremoniously to a position <
posting the colors
>
2. chiefly British to assign to a unit, position, or location (as in the military or civil service) 3. to put up (as bond)

New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.

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  • post — post …   Dictionnaire des rimes

  • Post-it® — Post it® …   Deutsch Wörterbuch

  • Post- — Post …   Deutsch Wörterbuch

  • post — post·abdomen; post·absorptive; post·age; post·al·ly; post; post·anoxic; post·antennal; post·arteriolar; post·atomic; post·audit; post·axial; post·bellum; post·brachium; post·branchial; post·breeding; post·canonical; post·cardinal; post·cava;… …   English syllables

  • post- — ♦ Élément, du lat. post « après », dans le temps (postdater) et dans l espace (postposer). post élément, du lat. post, après . ⇒POST , préf. Préf. tiré de la prép. lat. post «après», entrant dans la constr. de nombreux termes sav. ou techn., des… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • POST — bezeichnet: Postdienstleister und deren Beförderungsgüter, siehe Post, speziell die Deutsche Post AG die Österreichische Post Die Schweizerische Post eine Stadt im US amerikanischen Bundesstaat Texas, siehe Post (Texas) eine Mitteilung in… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Post — Post, n. [F. poste, LL. posta station, post (where horses were kept), properly, a fixed or set place, fem. fr. L. positus placed, p. p. of ponere. See {Position}, and cf. {Post} a pillar.] 1. The place at which anything is stopped, placed, or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Post-it — est une marque utilisée notamment pour une petite feuille de papier autoadhésive amovible, rassemblée en petit bloc, inventé en 1977[1] par la société américaine 3M. Il est conçu pour pouvoir y inscrire des notes et les coller et décoller à… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Post — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda La palabra de origen latino post puede referirse a: En el vocablo español post ó pos , es un prefijo que significa después de o simplemente después. Por ejemplo: posparto, posgrado, posponer. El Diccionario… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Post — Prefix with Latin origin meaning after .Post may refer to: * An entry in a blog or internet forum (also see: posting style) * Mail, the postal system, especially in Commonwealth of Nations countries * Pole, a long and straight stick, usually… …   Wikipedia

  • Post — Post, n. [AS., fr. L. postis, akin to ponere, positum, to place. See {Position}, and cf. 4th {Post}.] 1. A piece of timber, metal, or other solid substance, fixed, or to be fixed, firmly in an upright position, especially when intended as a stay… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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