enter

  • 61ENTER — (Roget s Thesaurus II) Index enter noun admission, arrival, cut, entrance1, invasion, pass, plunge, trespass verb admit, break in …

    English dictionary for students

  • 62enter — [13] Enter comes ultimately from a Latin preposition and adverb, intrā, which meant ‘inside’ (and was formed from in ‘in’ and the suffix trā, as in extra). This was taken as the basis of a Latin verb, intrāre ‘enter’, which passed into English… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 63enter — v 1. come in or into, go in or into, pass into, flow into, move through; approach, set foot on, board, embark. 2. break in, force one s way in, intrude, irrupt, trespass; interrupt, break in on, burst in upon, Sl. butt in, U.S. Sl. horn in;… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 64enter —   Komo, ho okomo; ukokomo (together), ulu, unu.    ♦ To enter by mistake, komohewa.    ♦ To enter without ceremony or permission, komo wale …

    English-Hawaiian dictionary

  • 65Enter — įvedimo klavišas statusas T sritis informatika apibrėžtis Klaviatūros klavišas, kurį paspaudus įvedama ir vykdoma komanda, o renkant tekstą – pradedama nauja eilutė arba nauja pastraipa. Užrašas ant klavišo standartinėje lietuviškoje klaviatūroje …

    Enciklopedinis kompiuterijos žodynas

  • 66enter — vt. => Greffer, Remplacer. A1) monter un bas sur une chaussette (les deux étant tricotés séparément) : montâ <monter> (Albanais.001). A2) enter deux pièces de bois bout à bout // assembler enter par une entaille : êbwêtâ bè à bè… …

    Dictionnaire Français-Savoyard

  • 67enter — To form a constituent part; to become a part or partaker; to impenetrate; share or mix with, as, tin enters into the composition of pewter. Bedford v. Colorado Fuel & Iron Corporation, 102 Colo. 538, 81 P.2d 752, 755. To go or come into a place… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 68enter — To form a constituent part; to become a part or partaker; to impenetrate; share or mix with, as, tin enters into the composition of pewter. Bedford v. Colorado Fuel & Iron Corporation, 102 Colo. 538, 81 P.2d 752, 755. To go or come into a place… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 69enter — To go into; to pass in or upon; as to enter a house or a close, sometimes for the purpose of taking possession. To list by name in a competition, as to enter a horse for a race. To make note of a fact by way of making a record thereof to be… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 70enter — [13] Enter comes ultimately from a Latin preposition and adverb, intrā, which meant ‘inside’ (and was formed from in ‘in’ and the suffix trā, as in extra). This was taken as the basis of a Latin verb, intrāre ‘enter’, which passed into English… …

    Word origins