Meaning Character
What does Character mean? Here you find 96 meanings of the word Character. You can also add a definition of Character yourself

1

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A distinguishing feature of a waveform in a seismic event, such as shape, frequency, phase or continuity.
Source: glossary.oilfield.slb.com

2

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


n. ~ 1. A letter, digit, or other symbol that can be arranged in groups to represent information. - 2. The whole of features, traits, and attributes that distinguish something. - 3. Computing · The co [..]
Source: www2.archivists.org

3

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


One letter or symbol of text. For example, a single standard SMS text message can be a maximum of 160 characters in length.
Source: bbc.co.uk

4

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


mid-14c., carecter, "symbol marked or branded on the body;" mid-15c., "symbol or drawing used in sorcery," from Old French caratere "feature, character" (13c., Modern Fre [..]
Source: etymonline.com

5

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A term relating to Conservation Areas or Listed Buildings, but also to the appearance of any rural or urban location in terms of its landscape or the layout of streets and open spaces, often giving places their own distinct identity.
Source: planningportal.co.uk (offline)

6

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Heritable trait possessed by an organism; characters are usually described in terms of their states, for example: "hair present" vs. "hair absent," where "hair" is the ch [..]
Source: ucmp.berkeley.edu

7

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Any representation of an individual being presented in a dramatic or narrative work through extended dramatic or verbal representation. The reader can interpret characters as endowed with moral and di [..]
Source: web.cn.edu

8

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


1. A symbol such as a letter, number or punctuation mark that canbe arranged to represent higher units of meaning, such as wordsand sentences. 2. The group of bits that represents such a symbol.
Source: wildpackets.com (offline)

9

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


fictional character: an imaginary person represented in a work of fiction (play or film or story); "she is the main character in the novel" engrave or inscribe characters on [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

10

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Any symbol (usually alphabetic, numeric, or punctuation) that can be entered into your computer.
Source: math.utah.edu

11

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A person in a fictitious story of any medium, eg novel, film, oral tale.
Source: schoolatoz.nsw.edu.au (offline)

12

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


what a person is like. Someone’s character may be good or bad, honest or dishonest, nice or nasty
Source: eenglish.in

13

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A letter, digit, or other symbol that is used as part of the organization, control, or representation of data. 2. One of the units of an alphabet.
Source: atis.org (offline)

14

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A single digit, letter of the alphabet, or other symbol. Usually represented inside a computer by one byte.
Source: extension.iastate.edu (offline)

15

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


An imaginary person that inhabits a literary work. Literary characters may be major or minor, static (unchanging) or dynamic (capable of change). In Shakespeare's Othello
Source: highered.mheducation.com (offline)

16

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


an imaginary personage who acts, appears, or is referred to in a literary work. Major or main characters are those that receive most attention, minor characters least. Flat characters are relatively s [..]
Source: wwnorton.com

17

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


The 'person' in a work of fiction or drama. The way the author creates characters in a literary work is called characterization. You may also want to take a look at the entry on character an [..]
Source: courses.nus.edu.sg

18

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


 – a person in a piece of literature
Source: phccwritingcenter.org

19

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


 a letter, handwriting.
Source: shakespeare-online.com

20

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


 to carve or engrave.
Source: shakespeare-online.com

21

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


the fictitious or real individual in a story, performed by an actor; also called players. Example: The cast of players in Duck Soup (1933) from Paramount's press book.
Source: filmsite.org

22

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


refers to any letter, punctuation mark, space, or digit used to represent information.
Source: wiu.edu (offline)

23

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


(In typography) Any letter, figure, punctuation, symbol or space
Source: writedesignonline.com

24

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A character is either a symbol (letters, numbers, punctuation) or non-printing "control" (e.g., carriage return or soft hyphen).  UTF-8 is the most common character set and includes the grap [..]
Source: developer.mozilla.org

25

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


a person who is responsible for the thoughts and actions within a story, poem, or other literature. Characters are extremely important because they are the medium through which a reader interacts with a piece of literature. Every character has his or her own personality, which a creative author uses to assist in forming the plot of a story or creat [..]
Source: roanokecityschools.org (offline)

26

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A component of phenotype (including specific molecular, morphological, behavioral or other features) used by systematists to diagnose species or higher taxa, or to evaluate phylogenetic relationships among different species or higher taxa, or relationships among populations within a species. character displacement
Source: mhhe.com (offline)

27

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


In computer software, any symbol that requires one byte of storage. This includes all the ASCII and extended ASCII characters, including the space character. In character-based software, everything th [..]
Source: webopedia.com

28

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A type fonts letter, number, symbol or a blank space in typesetting.
Source: neenahpaper.com

29

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


kharekter
Source: yiddishdictionaryonline.com (offline)

30

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Any mark, sign, or symbol conventionally used in writing or printing, including letters of the alphabet, numerals, punctuation marks, and reference marks. In indexing, the smallest unit used in the ar [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

31

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


In the Quantitative Coding System, characters are divided into people, animals and mythical beings and they may be either an individual (one person, one animal, etc.) or a group of individuals. Characters are not "coded" if: they are generic (everyone, no one, "dogs" bark, etc.)they are mentioned only as a sign that they are not [..]
Source: dreams-dictionary.org (offline)

32

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Element of a finite set of different elements, called the character set, defined for representation of information, and usually represented by a letter, number of symbol.
Source: aiche.org

33

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


1. Printable letters or symbols. 2. Most programmers, especially older ones; certainly assembler programmers.
Source: csgnetwork.com (offline)

34

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


any feature of an organism or taxonomic group that can be measured, counted or otherwise assessed.
Source: plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au

35

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Any letter, figure, punctuation, symbol or space.
Source: malanenewman.com (offline)

36

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


The person an actor is cast as in a spot.
Source: voices.com

37

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


In the context of evolution and development, a “character” refers to a more or less discrete trait (feature) of an organism at any level of observation, from the molecular to the visible. Not only phy [..]
Source: natureinstitute.org

38

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


In the context of credit transactions, character is one of the Three Cs of Credit. It is an indicator of how creditworthy a prospective borrower is likely to be, as determined by the borrower's handling of past debts and his or her stability in jobs and residences.
Source: econedlink.org (offline)

39

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


unit of measurement for type including letters, figures, punctuation marks and spaces
Source: mediastudentsbook.com (offline)

40

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


The financial steadiness and stability of a borrower. For example, when reviewing your loan application, a lender may look at how long you’ve lived at your current address or worked at your current jo [..]
Source: handsonbanking.org

41

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A trait of creditworthiness indicating a responsible attitude toward paying debts
Source: lifesmarts.org

42

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A borrower's reputation for paying bills and debts based on past behavior.
Source: stlouisfed.org

43

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


a single letter of the alphabet, a piece of punctuation or a digit. Also the name of a class that boxes a single character as an Object. Character also contains complicated static methods isLowerCase, [..]
Source: mindprod.com

44

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


a letter, numeral, symbol, punctuation mark, or space. See also: ASCII, byte
Source: dl.ket.org (offline)

45

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


(n) an imaginary person represented in a work of fiction (play or film or story)(n) a characteristic property that defines the apparent individual nature of something(n) the inherent complex of attrib [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

46

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A letter of the alphabet, number, space or punctuation mark is a character.
Source: netmeg.net (offline)

47

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A letter of the alphabet, number, space or punctuation mark is a character.
Source: jonstorm.com

48

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


N M branded/impressed letter/mark/etc; marking instrument; stamp| character| style
Source: latin-dictionary.org (offline)

49

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


In character. In harmony with a person’s actions, etc.
Source: bartleby.com

50

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


An oddity. One who has a distinctive peculiarity of manner: Sam Weller is a character, so is Pickwick. And Sam Weller’s conduct in the law-court was “in character,” but had [..]
Source: bartleby.com

51

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


In computer and machine-based telecommunications terminology, a character is a unit of information that roughly corresponds to a grapheme or a grapheme-like unit or symbol, such as in an alphabet or s [..]
Source: labautopedia.org

52

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Any letter, numeral, punctuation mark or other alphanumeric symbol.
Source: trumbullprinting.com

53

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


 A character is any letter, number, space, punctuation mark, or symbol that can be typed on a computer.    
Source: magazine.org (offline)

54

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


The representation of a person in a dramatic work, such as a film, computer game or radio play.
Source: lessonbucket.com (offline)

55

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Expression, individuality, and general appearance and deportment as considered typical of a breed.
Source: akc.org

56

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Any personified entity appearing in a film or a play.
Source: screenwriting.info

57

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A person (may be an animal or anthropomorphic object) in a story.
Source: providencechildrensfilmfestival.org

58

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


a person, animal, or spiritual entity that figures importantly in the telling of a story.
Source: www2.austincc.edu

59

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Taste good taste; characteristic of its origin
Source: drinktea.co.uk

60

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Set of features on certain wines that make them unique.
Source: infodrinks.com (offline)

61

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


an attribute of an organism (contrast with Character state).
Source: cpp.edu (offline)

62

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


In current usage, approximately equivalent to Personality. The sum of the relatively fixed Personality traits and habitual modes of response of an individual.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

63

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A phenotypic outcome (physical characteristic or Disease predisposition) that is determined by many Genes.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

64

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A character is any recognizable trait, feature, or property of an organism. Evolutionary biologists are interested in a character's heritability. Character polarity is the issue of the evolutiona [..]
Source: blackwellpublishing.com

65

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


In current usage, approximately equivalent to personality. The sum of the relatively fixed personality traits and habitual modes of response of an individual.
Source: medicaldictionaryweb.com

66

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Expression, individuality, and general appearance and deportment as considered typical of a breed.
Source: cats-and-dogs-on-the-web.com

67

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


An observable phenotypic feature of the developing, or fully developed organism that is the result of gene action, environmental stress, or a combination of the two.
Source: archaeologyinfo.com

68

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


    Any heritable attribute of organisms that varies among terminal taxa, and so is useful for phylogenetic reconstruction.
Source: sasb.org.au (offline)

69

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


The combined aromas and flavors of a particular food or ingredient. The character of a food is considered simple when it is one-dimensional, but it is complex when it has many discernible ingredients. Example: Mole sauce has several ingredients that blend to give the sauce a complex character. Granulated sugar has a very simple character.
Source: chefsbest.com (offline)

70

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


In computer science, a character is a display unit of information equivalent to one alphabetic letter or symbol. This relies on the general definition of a character as a single unit of written speech [..]
Source: techopedia.com

71

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Balling:
Source: winemaking.jackkeller.net

72

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


a letter, handwriting; to carve or engrave
Source: shakespearehigh.com

73

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A small integer representative of a unit of orthography. Historically, characters were usually stored as fixed-width integers (typically in a byte, or maybe two, depending on the character set), but with the advent of UTF-8, characters are often stored in a variable number of bytes depending on the size of the integer that represents the character. [..]
Source: archive.oreilly.com (offline)

74

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A single letter, digit, or symbol. 'Q' is a character. '4' is a character. '%' is a character. '123' and 'yo' are not characters.
Source: sealiesoftware.com

75

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


The smallest individual element of a string. Computers store characters as integers, but Perl lets you operate on them as text. The integer used to represent a particular character is called that char [..]
Source: perldoc.perl.org

76

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


, which may in turn be several characters (codepoints
Source: perldoc.perl.org

77

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


position (offset
Source: perldoc.perl.org

78

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


with the specified ordinal value. (The v
Source: perldoc.perl.org

79

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A single byte that holds a letter or punctuation. See also: ASCII, Byte
Source: plcdev.com

80

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


featured in a story and used as a medium to communicate/interact with the reader; he or she is given a specific attitude or attitudes, appearance, name, etc. to direct a storyline. Characters can be m [..]
Source: scribendi.com

81

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


The persona being played by a player within the context of a game.
Source: rpggeek.com

82

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A representation of a participant in the fictional story which exists only within the game; a member of the game's dramatis personae. While the behavior and actions of characters are often chosen and controlled by one player or the GM, the actions of a character can also be determined by multiple players or by any other means.
Source: rpg.stackexchange.com (offline)

83

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


The term character encompasses both minions and heroes. If an ability deals damage to "all characters", it will damage all minions and all heroes.
Source: icy-veins.com

84

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


The core of a practitioner’s true nature…the substance of what he/she has to offer as a human being…what is left after all the illusions, evasions, and elaborations are stripped away is pivotal to a change practitioner’s effectiveness.
Source: conneracademy.com (offline)

85

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Everyone in the game world is a character. This term applies to both PCs and NPCs.
Source: gnomestew.com

86

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


An attribute of individuals within a species for which heritable differences can be defined.
Source: groups.molbiosci.northwestern.edu

87

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A distinctive but not necessarily invariable feature exhibited by all individuals of a group and capable of being described or measured; e.g. color, size, performance. A character of a given individual will have a certain phenotype as determined by the individual's genotype and environment.
Source: esf.edu (offline)

88

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A genetically inherited feature of an organism, e.g. eye colour.
Source: nzlizards.landcareresearch.co.nz (offline)

89

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Term used to indicate both minions and heroes, used on card text to indicate that an effect can be used against minions and/or heroes. Charge
Source: us.battle.net (offline)

90

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Character refers to the miniature or figure within the Play Area
Source: critskillpeople.com (offline)

91

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A feature, or trait. Cf. character state.
Source: sites.sinauer.com (offline)

92

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A person’s willingness to repay a debt. A character loan is based on the reputation and/or personal credit history of a borrower, rather than collateral. A measure of creditworthiness.
Source: learnmoney.org (offline)

93

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A character is a symbol, figure, number, and punctuation or control function contained in a data stream. The character may be referred by its decimal value, hexadecimal value, or symbol.
Source: glossary.westnetinc.com (offline)

94

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character

Source: createfixate.com

95

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


A letter, digit, or other symbol that is used as part of the organization, control, or representation of information. [ASCII Code Table]
Source: interfacebus.com

96

0 Thumbs up   0 Thumbs down

Character


Characters are the fictional people that populate the world of whatever book you're reading. Here are a few of our favorites: Boo Radley from To Kill a MockingbirdThe Monster from Mary Shelley� [..]
Source: shmoop.com





<< Censorship Circulation >>

Dictionary.university is a dictionary written by people like you and me.
Please help and add a word. All sort of words are welcome!

Add meaning