Meaning Reference
What does Reference mean? Here you find 58 meanings of the word Reference. You can also add a definition of Reference yourself

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Reference


a matter that has been referred to a parliamentary committee for consideration and report; a subject being considered by a committee
Source: aph.gov.au

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Relationships Narrower Term:  equivalence relation name-title reference upward reference use reference used for reference Related Term:  cross-reference note reader service reference interview n. ~ 1. [..]
Source: www2.archivists.org

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A data element whose value is an address.
Source: docs.oracle.com

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A letter/statement written about a person by someone who knows them, detailing their abilities, character, qualifications, etc., which is sent to a prospective employer.
Source: businessballs.com

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1580s, "act of referring," from refer + -ance, or else from French référence, from Medieval Latin *referentia, from Latin referentem (nominative referens), present participle of referre (see [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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1620s, "to assign;" as "to provide with a reference," 1837 (implied in referenced), from reference (n.). Related: Referencing.
Source: etymonline.com

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source of information or direction.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Within SGD, a "reference" is most often a published article in a scientific journal or book; however some references are unpublished results or personal communications to SGD. A comprehensive list of references may be obtained for a given locus within its Literature Guide section.
Source: yeastgenome.org (offline)

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A variable data type in which the variable's value is an address.
Source: oracle.com

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(revision in progress) Refrain:
Source: quotegarden.com (offline)

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mention: a remark that calls attention to something or someone; "she made frequent mention of her promotion"; "there was no mention of it"; &amp [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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act of referring, allusion, relation
Source: eenglish.in

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A means of keeping track of objects, words and illustrations in written and spoken texts. In spoken language the references may be to items in the surrounding environment. In written language the refe [..]
Source: syllabus.bostes.nsw.edu.au

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refers to how one film in its storyline (through dialogue, images) alludes to, recalls, or refers to another film; similar to homage Examples: the movie that E.T. (in Spielberg's E.T.: The Extra- [..]
Source: filmsite.org

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In the context of objects, this is an object reference. On MDN, we could be talking about the JavaScript reference itself. In computing, a reference is a value that indirectly accesses data to retriev [..]
Source: developer.mozilla.org

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A passive or active signal used to normalize experimental results. Endogenous and exogenous controls are examples of active references. Active reference means the signal is generated as the result of [..]
Source: free.premierbiosoft.com

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Here are two senses for reference:   Reference is the symbolic relationship that a linguistic expression has with the concrete object or abstraction it represents. Reference is the relationship of one [..]
Source: www-01.sil.org

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A conventional word or phrase used in a work to refer the reader to another part of the text (see above or see below) or a similar word or phrase used in an index, catalog, or reference work to direct [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

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reference (pop)
Source: users.ugent.be

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1 : an act of referring ;specif : mention or citation of one document (as a statute) in another [a municipality may adopt by all or a part of this title "Alaska Statutes"] see also incorpora [..]
Source: dictionary.findlaw.com

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A reference contains all the details about the source you have cited, with enough information so that your reader can locate the resource. Typically it includes the author, year of publication, title, [..]
Source: libguides.rhul.ac.uk

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  A written or verbal statement about a person's qualifications, character, and dependability.
Source: qirc.qld.gov.au (offline)

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a document (article, book, etc.) containing pertinent information about previous research that serves as support or proof; a formal entry directing the reader 
Source: mseditoronline.com

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A source used in research and mentioned by a researcher in a paper or an article or in in libraries, a part of the library’s collection that includes encyclopedias, handbooks, directories, and other p [..]
Source: gjesm.net

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Reference is the act of sending or directing to another for information, service, consideration, or decision.
Source: definitions.uslegal.com

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(n) a remark that calls attention to something or someone(n) a short note recognizing a source of information or of a quoted passage(n) an indicator that orients you generally(n) a book to which you c [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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"tekst" align="">
Source: vanel.com (offline)

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Eddy current transducer.
Source: nde-ed.org

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serif">Blocks - A block or series of blocks of material containing artificial or natural discontinuities or one or more reflecting areas at one or more distances from the test surface, which a [..]
Source: nde-ed.org

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serif">Radiographs - A group of radiographs containing images of discontinuities. These can be used as comparison "standards" for acceptability of materials.
Source: nde-ed.org

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A means of inserting a property from one AWS resource into another. For example, you could insert an Amazon EC2 security group property into an Amazon RDS resource.
Source: docs.aws.amazon.com

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What must be achieved in order to match a plan; Synonyms: desired;
Source: g.oswego.edu (offline)

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in your application, a recommendation on an applicant’s application form from a teacher, adviser or professional.
Source: ucas.com

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A letter of support and evaluation, also known as a recommendation, that is usually required for admission to an American college. References from teachers and headmasters are particularly helpful in international admission because the l etter writer can help place an individual applicant's candidacy in the clearest context for evaluation. Oft [..]
Source: bibl.u-szeged.hu (offline)

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(referanse): the relationship between a word and the world it is used to describe. The reference of a noun is the thing or group of things that the speaker has in mind when using the word. Reference c [..]
Source: folk.uio.no

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A physical or chemical quantity whose value is known, and thus is used to calibrate or standardize instruments.
Source: deq.idaho.gov

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A physical or chemical quantity whose value is known exactly, and thus is used to calibrate instruments or standardize measurements. Also called a standard.
Source: owp.csus.edu

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Similar to "control," referring to a treatment that reproduces many of the aspects of an experimental design, while excluding the variable of interest. Whereas in an experiment using a true control, the treatment and control differ only in terms of the variable of interest (see the salt water example under "control,&q [..]
Source: hubbardbrook.org (offline)

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Where you look to find a pointer to information somewhere else. (See indirection.) References come in two flavors, symbolic references and hard references.
Source: archive.oreilly.com (offline)

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A Reference is a special asset
Source: hannonhill.com

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A reference
Source: docs.scala-lang.org

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In C++ a reference is similar to a pointer, except that, unlike pointers, references are used syntactically just like the represented object, and are not themselves considered first class objects, in [..]
Source: mza.com

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count accounts for it. (Some hard references are held internally, such as the implicit reference from one of a typeglob
Source: perldoc.perl.org

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Where you look to find a pointer to information somewhere else. (See indirection
Source: perldoc.perl.org

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Source: perldoc.perl.org

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an alternative name for an object or a function. See also: operator overloading, call-by-reference. TC++PL 5.4.1, D&E 3.7.
Source: stroustrup.com

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Directive to assume stated heading.
Source: f-16.net

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Heading to fly as directed by the flight lead. Reference 270.
Source: f-16.net

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Directive to assume stated heading.
Source: voodoo-world.cz

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Heading to fly as directed by the flight lead. Reference 270.
Source: voodoo-world.cz

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Natural or near-natural status, characterized by least impairment due to human activities, such as agriculture, settlement,  organic pollution,  eutrophication,  water abstraction, etc. For any  water [..]
Source: freshwaterplatform.eu

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An individual to whom inquiries may be made regarding another person's character, ability, or whereabouts. A lender generally will ask a borrower to provide the names, phone numbers, and addresses of at least three individuals to be used as references for the borrower. In the event that the lender loses track of the borrower's whereabouts [..]
Source: finaid.wsu.edu (offline)

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An individual to whom inquiries may be made regarding another person's character, ability, or whereabouts. A lender generally will ask a borrower to provide the names, phone numbers, and addresses of at least three individuals to be used as references for the borrower. In the event that the lender loses track of the borrower's whereabouts [..]
Source: k-state.edu (offline)

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a piece of prior art. 
Source: bpmlegal.com

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(literary,or|archaic) A relationship or relation (en,to something). *
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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This Glossary is taken with permission directly from http://www.forages.css.orst.edu/Topics/Pastures/Grazing/Terminology/grazterm_body.html
Source: agry.purdue.edu

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The name and description of a book or document, used to locate it or to refer others to it. A reference is always complete enough so that the book or paper can be found again by another person. For example, to locate a document in an ARCHIVE, a researcher needs a reference that includes the name of the archive; the name of the group of records; the [..]
Source: cbu.ca (offline)

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1. A service that helps people find needed information. 2. Sometimes "reference" refers to reference collections, such as encyclopedias, indexes, handbooks, directories, etc. 3. A ci [..]
Source: libguides.usc.edu





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