attribute
nounEtymology
From Latin attributus.
- borrowed from attributus
Definitions
A characteristic or quality of a thing.
- His finest attribute is his kindness.
An object that is considered typical of someone or some function, in particular as an…
An object that is considered typical of someone or some function, in particular as an artistic convention.
- The eagle and the bolt of lightning are attributes of Jove.
A word that qualifies a noun.
›+ 6 more definitionsshow fewer
That which is predicated or affirmed of a subject
That which is predicated or affirmed of a subject; a predicate; an accident.
An option or setting belonging to some object.
- This packet has its coherency attribute set to zero.
- A file with the read-only attribute set cannot be overwritten.
A semantic item with which a method or other code element may be decorated.
- Properties can be marked as obsolete with an attribute, which will cause the compiler to generate a warning if they are used.
- This attribute is used to declare in metadata that the attributed method or class requires SocketPermission of the declared form.
A numeric value representing the colours of part of the screen display.
- […] you can only carry two objects, your attributes clash when you walk past multi-coloured objects and your enemies fly up and down from the ceiling.
- If any of the video buffer's background attribute bits are on, MONO converts the attribute to 70h (inverse video).
To ascribe (something) to a given cause, reason etc.
To ascribe (something) to a given cause, reason etc.; to affix.
To associate ownership or authorship of (something) to someone.
- This poem is attributed to Browning.
- We attribute nothing to God that hath any repugnancy or contradiction in it.
- It is to be recouered, but that the merit of ſeruice is ſeldom attributed to the true and exact performer, I would haue that drumme or another, or hic iacet.
The neighborhood
- synonymrefer
- neighborattributive
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for attribute. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA