access
nounEtymology
From Middle English accesse, acces, borrowed from Middle French acces (“attack, onslaught”) or from its source Latin accessus, perfect passive participle of accēdō (“approach; accede”), from ad (“to, toward, at”) + cēdō (“move, yield”). Doublet of accessus. First attested in the early 14th century. The sense "entrance" was first attested about 1380.
Definitions
A way or means of approaching or entering
A way or means of approaching or entering; an entrance; a passage.
- The door provides access to the premises.
- All access was thronged.
The act of approaching or entering
The act of approaching or entering; an advance.
- They gained access to the basement from the stairs.
The right or ability of approaching or entering
The right or ability of approaching or entering; admittance; admission; accessibility.
- Staff prevent unauthorized access to the building.
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The quality of being easy to approach or enter.
- ease of access
- I did repel his fetters, and denied His access to me.
- Coalition plans to widen access to university will fail to get to the 'root cause' of the problem, according to the Russell Group.
Admission to sexual intercourse.
- During coverture, access of the husband shall be presumed, unless the contrary be shown.
An increase by addition
An increase by addition; accession
- an access of territory
- I, from the influence of thy looks, receive access in every virtue.
An onset, attack, or fit of disease
An onset, attack, or fit of disease; an ague fit.
- The first access looked like an apoplexy.
- Then he resumed the pose, the decent pose, from which the sudden access of his old trouble had startled him, his hands on his knees, […]
An outburst of an emotion
An outburst of an emotion; a paroxysm; a fit of passion.
The right of a noncustodial parent to visit their child.
The process of locating data in memory.
- Operations on C++ volatiles do put the compiler on notice that the object may be modified asynchronously, and hence are generally safer to use than ordinary variable accesses.
Connection to or communication with a computer program or to the Internet.
Complicity or assent.
To gain or obtain access to.
- The value of having in-house medical expertise is that staff with poor attendance records who have difficulty accessing NHS services can receive support from their employer, to help reduce absenteeism brought about by medical conditions.
To have access to (data).
- I can't access most of the data on the computer without a password.
The neighborhood
- neighboraccede
- neighboraccessary
- neighboraccessibility
- neighboraccessible
- neighboraccessibly
- neighboraccession
- neighboraccessory
Derived
access agent, access code, access control, access course, access day, access journalism, accessless, access method, access modifier, accessor, access point, access road, access specifier, access time, access token, access violation, accessway, anti-access area denial, controlled-access highway, data access object, direct access, e-access, inaccess, limited-access highway, multiaccess, nonaccess, online public access catalog, open access, public access, quick access recorder, random access, read-only access, remote access, self-access, deaccess, reaccess, unaccessed
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at access. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at access. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
10 hops · closes at access
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA