static

adj
/ˈstæt.ɪk/UK/ˈstæt.ɪk/CA

Etymology

Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *steh₂- Proto-Indo-European *stísteh₂ti Proto-Hellenic *hístāmi Ancient Greek ῐ̔́στημῐ (hĭ́stēmĭ) Proto-Indo-European *-kos Ancient Greek -κός (-kós) Ancient Greek -ῐκός (-ĭkós) Ancient Greek στᾰτῐκός (stătĭkós)der. Latin staticusder. English static Modern Latin staticus, from Ancient Greek στατικός (statikós), from ἵστημι (hístēmi, “to make stand”). By surface analysis, stasis + -tic.

  1. derived from στατικός
  2. derived from staticus

Definitions

  1. Unchanging

    Unchanging; that cannot or does not change.

    • It's important to know that the Earth's crust is in no manner a stable and static place.
  2. Making no progress

    Making no progress; stalled, without movement or advancement.

  3. Immobile

    Immobile; fixed in place; having no motion.

    • England were ponderous with ball in hand, their runners static when taking the ball and their lines obvious, while their front row struggled badly in the scrum.
  4. + 8 more definitions
    1. Computed, created, or allocated before the program starts running, as opposed to at…

      Computed, created, or allocated before the program starts running, as opposed to at runtime.

      • A further advantage of static type checking is of course computational efficiency, since run time checks are no longer necessary.
      • A static variable is one whose storage remains allocated for the duration of the entire program. All global variables are static variables.
      • Despite the term, a static website doesn’t mean one that never changes. Static refers to the fact that the site’s assets—HTML files, graphics, and other downloadable content such as PDF files—are just static files sitting in an S3 bucket.
    2. Defined for the class itself, as opposed to instances of it

      Defined for the class itself, as opposed to instances of it; thus shared between all instances and accessible even without an instance.

    3. Interference on a broadcast signal caused by atmospheric disturbances

      Interference on a broadcast signal caused by atmospheric disturbances; heard as crackles on radio, or seen as random specks on television.

      • Near-synonyms: shash, snow
      • The World Series was on, but there was so much static that we could barely even follow the action.
      • The FCC says it decided to attempt standardization of VHF receivers after getting "thousands of complaints" from disgruntled boatmen who found their sets brought in mostly a lot of garble and static.
    4. Interference or obstruction from people.

      • I was getting a lot of static from the bean counters whenever I tried to proceed.
    5. Verbal abuse.

      • Near-synonym: flak
      • Don't you be giving me any static over it. You know the rules.
      • You want to start some static?
    6. Static electricity.

      • This stupid carpet is always giving me a shock from the static.
    7. A static caravan.

    8. A static variable.

      • Some compilers will allow statics to be inlined, but then incorrectly create multiple instances of the inlined variable at run-time.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

A definitional loop anchored at static. 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.

01static02progress03growth04strength05potency06authority07definitive08decisive09deciding10potential

A definitional loop anchored at static. 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 static

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