Meaning Feature
What does Feature mean? Here you find 77 meanings of the word Feature. You can also add a definition of Feature yourself

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Feature


See Attribute.
Source: robotics.stanford.edu

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Relationships Related Term:  news film short n. ~ 1. A motion picture that is of substantial length, generally running an hour or more. - 2. A news story, in any media, in which human interest is more [..]
Source: www2.archivists.org

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1755, "to resemble, have features resembling," from feature (n.). The sense of "make special display or attraction of" is 1888; entertainment sense from 1897. Related: Featured; fe [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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early 14c., "make, form, fashion" (obsolete), from Anglo-French feture, from Old French faiture "deed, action; fashion, shape, form; countenance," from Latin factura "a format [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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The use of advertising, displays, or other activity, generally by a retailer, to call special attention to a product, generally for a limited period of time.
Source: ama.org (offline)

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A fact or technical specification about a product.
Source: ama.org (offline)

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An individual data value within a training (or query) entry. For example, if a training entry for user height consists of person's height, person's gender, mother's height, father' [..]
Source: cloud.google.com

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non-portable archaeological remains, such as pyramids or post-holes.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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physical characteristic of an organism or environment.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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An externally observable service provided by the system which directly fulfills a stakeholder need. [D04728]
Source: maxwideman.com

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Any physical structure or element, such as a wall, post hole, pit, or floor, that is made or altered by humans but (unlike an artifact) is not portable and cannot be removed from a site.
Source: archaeological.org

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The machine learning expression for a piece of measurable information about something. If you store the age, annual income, and weight of a set of people, you're storing three features about them [..]
Source: datascienceglossary.org

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Feature plants are visually dramatic plants which lend themselves perfectly for use as focal points in the landscape. They should be placed in a prominent area so that their special form or unique cha [..]
Source: plantguide.lowes.ca

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a prominent attribute or aspect of something; "the map showed roads and other features"; "generosity is one of his best characteristics" have: have [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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1. A slice of business functionality that is meaningful to a customer or user. 2. Used by some to mean a medium-size user story that can and will be divided into a collection of smaller user stories t [..]
Source: innolution.com

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A variable that represents a dimension in a dataset. This might be the output of a single sensor, such as a voxel, or a refined measure reflecting specific aspect of data, such as a specific spectral [..]
Source: pymvpa.org

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Feature


 beauty.
Source: shakespeare-online.com

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(film) a "full-length" motion picture, one greater than 60 minutes in length - but usually about 90-120 minutes on one particular topic; also known as a theatrical; contrast to short [..]
Source: filmsite.org

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(n.) A notable property of a device or software application. Many analysts bemoan the advent of featuritis-the seemingly endless addition of more and more features onto what was once a simple applicat [..]
Source: webopedia.com

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1. The attribute of a thing that makes it what it is, e.g., wings are on birds not cats. 2. Phonemics. The attribute of a speech sound that distinguishes from other speech sounds. See binary feature; [..]
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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A comparatively long article in a magazine or newspaper given special emphasis by the editor(s) or publisher, as opposed to a short article, regular column, or editorial. In magazines, the article ill [..]
Source: abc-clio.com

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A longer, more in-depth article.
Source: journalism.co.uk (offline)

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A longer article or radio story, usually in greater depth and complexity than a simple news item. Features may grow from a current news event or simply be examining a timeless issue. Features which ar [..]
Source: thenewsmanual.net

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An abstraction of a natural or man-made real world object. A spatial feature has one or more geometric properties. For example, a road feature might be represented by a line, and a hydrant might be re [..]
Source: knowledge.autodesk.com

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[data structure] A feature is a cartographic point, line or polygon object with a spatial location in the real-world landscape that can be used in a GIS for storage, visualization and analysis.
Source: gisgeography.com

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The biggest, or key, bonus round in a slot.
Source: vegasslots.co.uk

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A shortened version of bonus feature used to describe the bonus game.
Source: onlinepokies.com

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We see a wide variety of data to analyze. These datasets could be customer purchases, oil prices or error messages from an engine. Sometimes we can analyze the data as is. Many times however, the raw data may not be easy to analyze due to variations within the data or because the units of one variable may not be easily comparable to units of anothe [..]
Source: viascience.com (offline)

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A longer, more in-depth article. An article of special interest with a quality other than its timeliness as main attraction.
Source: topofthefold.wordpress.com

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Story emphasizing the human or entertaining aspects of a
Source: cssforum.com.pk

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A longer, more in-depth article.
Source: cssforum.com.pk

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as distinct form news story, tends to be longer, carry more background information, colour, wider range of sources and journalist’s opinion can be prominent.
Source: creative.sulekha.com

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A carefully researched article, that either explains, interprets and/or provides background or tells of interesting, unusual occurrences that interest the reader. Feature stories sometimes have emotio [..]
Source: amalnet.k12.il

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A feature takes an in-depth look at what's going on behind the news. It gets into the lives of people. It tries to explain why and how a trend developed. Unlike news, a feature does not have to b [..]
Source: snn-rdr.ca

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Feature


article that goes beyond reporting of facts to explain and/or entertain
Source: mediastudentsbook.com (offline)

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A term used in Eiffel and some other OO (Object Oriented) languages to refer to a static or instance method or variable. In Meyer’s definition, there is no implication of public, but some people use t [..]
Source: mindprod.com

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(n) a prominent attribute or aspect of something(n) the characteristic parts of a person's face: eyes and nose and mouth and chin(n) the principal (full-length) film in a program at a movie theat [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Source: The OpenGIS® Abstract Specification Topic 6: The Coverage Type and its Subtypes Version 6. http://www.opengis.org/techno/abstract/00-106.pdf
Source: opengeospatial.org

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Depending on the context, the term “feature” means: – the ability to accomplish a specific task (i.e., functionality) OR – a particular characteristic of the software
Source: qatutor.com (offline)

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A property or behavior of software or hardware.
Source: computeruser.com

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Article that provides general knowledge, entertainment, or background on the news. Feature articles are usually longer than news articles.
Source: trumbullprinting.com

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Options that you can add to lines on your account. Available features include cloud storage, international calling, Mobile Hotspot, equipment insurance, Caller ID Blocking and more. You can add or change features quickly online in My Verizon.
Source: verizonwireless.com (offline)

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Feature


See Bug.
Source: documentation.cpanel.net (offline)

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A physical component of a historic property such as street, tree, roof, window, etc. and can be the subject of a treatment intervention. Also referred to as an element. (Design Guidelines for Department of Defense Historic Buildings and Districts; US Department of Defense, 2008)
Source: ip51.icomos.org (offline)

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Feature

Source: variety.com

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Feature


A film (fiction or documentary) of no less than 75 minutes aimed at theatrical release. Please refer to the relevant program guidelines for specific length requirements.
Source: film.vic.gov.au

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Feature


Main Event.
Source: scrafan.com (offline)

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A distinguishing mark on an object or in a scene that can be seen in a photo. We talk about marking and measuring features. Whether something is a feature or not is in the eye of the beholder. The edg [..]
Source: photomodeler.com

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a type of material remain that cannot be removed from a site such as roasting pits, fire hearths, house floors or post molds.
Source: wvculture.org

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Feature


See Archaeological Feature
Source: sonoma.edu

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Feature is jargon for any material remains that cannot be removed from a site such as pits, house floors, fire hearths, or large stone altars.
Source: archaeologyexpert.co.uk

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evidence at archaeological sites which are not artifacts
Source: thesga.org

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Part of the description of a vessel. A vessel’s features include builder and engine type, and can also include ice class, pump type, gearing and various other aspects. Feedermax
Source: vesselsvalue.com

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A non-portable object at an archaeological site that was created or modified by humans, such as a hearth or a wall. Features are often visible today only as disturbances in the soil. For example, soil [..]
Source: sfu.museum

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A non-portable artifact; e.g. hearths, architectural elements, or soil stains.
Source: archaeologyinfo.com

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A feature is immovable evidence of a human activity occurring in a specific location. Features can be made up of groupings of artifacts such as a “pot drop” or a “flaking station”; bedrock uses such as bedrock grinding (e.g., mortars, slicks, basins), rock art (pictographs, petroglyphs), or rock shelters; or use areas such as fire pits/hearths, roc [..]
Source: sandiegoarchaeologicalsociety.com (offline)

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A large, complex artifact or part of a site such as a hearth, cairn, housepit, rock alignment, or activity area. Field School
Source: heritageedu.com (offline)

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Non-artifactual evidence of human activity at an archaeological site usually expressed as noticeable soil disturbances such as pits and hearths. It can also refer to masonry walls and other structures at historical archaeological sites.
Source: mn.gov (offline)

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A coherent business function or attribute of a software product or system. Features are large and chunky and usually comprise many detailed (unit) requirements. A single feature typically is implemented through many stories. Features may be functional or non-functional; they provide the basis for organizing stories.
Source: solutionsiq.com (offline)

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A feature is an advertiser’s video-on-demand asset, running between two and 30 minutes, available as part of Searchlight, Comcast Spotlight’s video-on-demand advertising service.
Source: comcastspotlight.com (offline)

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Teaching clients about FFCs teaches them to identify the object by its features (quality of an object), its function (purpose), or the class (category: food, clothes etc.).  The goal of teaching FFCs [..]
Source: partnersmn.com

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A ServiceNow feature provides a complete solution that customers can implement to add value to their organization. New features are only available as part of a feature release.
Source: wiki.servicenow.com

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 A feature is usually defined as an ace or king (occasionally a queen) that may be of particular importance in a given deal. Showing of features in a hand through the bidding commences usually when a [..]
Source: acbl.org

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(1) a high honor (usually ace or king; sometimes ace, king or queen)
Source: bridgeworld.com

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Permanent component of the game which is defined in the development stages of a project, for example the interactive world map in Legends of Honor, which players can explore freely.
Source: goodgamestudios.com

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Something such as a fireplace, wall, well, or similar that can’t just be dug out of the earth like a coin or pot.
Source: newarchaeology.com

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An immovable artifact, something that is made by humans but cannot be picked up and carried off a site. This includes (among many others) foundations, cooking hearths, and post holes (which usually are nothing more substantial than darkly-colored soils). Features are recorded in detail in the field and often represent specific, short duration event [..]
Source: jefpat.org (offline)

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cultural remains more complex and permanent than a single artifact (such as house floors, storage pits, fire hearths, burials, or cooking pits).
Source: diggingontario.uwo.ca (offline)

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permanent fixture (foundations, walls, cellars, wells, etc.) or distinct deposit (trash pits, privies, etc.) on a site
Source: virginiadigs.net

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Typically refers to the professional comic who comes on before the headliner, someone who does 15-30 minutes and maybe headlines the occasional small room. Sometimes used interchangeably with ‘Middle.’ “Her career is going well, she’s been getting a lot of feature work on the road.”
Source: creatingacomic.com (offline)

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A feature describes prominent or distinctive user-visible aspects, quality or characteristics of a software system or systems [Kang et al. 1990]
Source: informatique.umons.ac.be

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1. A defined entity, its spatial object representation and associated attributes. 2. The graphical representation of an interest attached to land such as an easement that represents an area less than [..]
Source: isc.ca

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A map feature represents an individual object on a map, for instance, a street or a specific building.
Source: geoportal.rlp.de

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A feature (object) in the computer science refers to a uniquely identifiable instance of a class. It can only assume the states and behaviours assigned to its own class. In geomatics data features are [..]
Source: geoportal.rlp.de

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A set of logically related functional requirements that provides a capability to the user and enables the satisfaction of a business objective.
Source: processimpact.com (offline)

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In inspection, any characteristic of an image or a region in an image.
Source: ateworld.com (offline)

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Feature plants are visually dramatic plants which lend themselves perfectly for use as focal points in the landscape. They should be placed in a prominent area so that their special form or unique cha [..]
Source: plantguide.lowes.com





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