See Also: Date(medicine)
Cut off date(finance)
up-to-date(dictionary)
Due date(money)
out-of-date(dictionary)
due date(dictionary)
Value date(money)
Value date(finance)
date(dictionary)
date(2)(dictionary)

tuberculoma (iou) and date(2) (iou)


tuberculoma (iou)



tuberculoma noun. . Formerly also Anglicized as tuberculome. L19.
[formed as TUBERCULOID + -OMA.]
Medicine. A mass of soft material in the brain, lung, etc., resembling a tumour and caused by the tubercle bacillus.

date(2) (iou)



date noun2. ME.
[Old & mod. French from medieval Latin data use as noun of fem. of datus pa. pple of dare give. Derived from the Latin formula used in Dating letters, e.g. Data (sc. epistola) Romae, '(letter) given at Rome'.]
The day of the month; the day of the month, the month, or the year of an event; the time or period at which something happened or the time at which something is to happen. ME.
Goldsmith Not far remov'd the date, When commerce proudly flourish'd through the state. E. Waugh A date was fixed for the wedding. A. Burgess 714 to 768, if you want his dates.
b. A statement in a document, letter, book, or inscription, of the time (and often place) of execution, Writing, publication, etc. LME.
Term of life or existence; season; duration. ME.
Milton Ages of endless date Founded in righteousness.
The period to which something old belongs; the age (of a thing or person). LME.
E. A. Freeman Rich in antiquities of Roman date.
The limit or end of a period of time or of the duration of something. arch. LME.
W. Cowper All has its date below; the fatal hour Was registered in Heaven ere time began.
a. An appointment or engagement at a particular time (esp. with a person of the opposite sex); a social activity engaged in by two people. colloq. L19.
E. Bowen He won't be in for supper. He's got a date.
b. The person with whom such an appointment is made. colloq. (orig. US). E20.
J. D. Salinger There were about a million girls..waiting for their dates to show up.
c. A theatrical, musical, etc., engagement or performance; a place where such a performance is given (esp. as part of a tour). colloq. E20.
P. G. Wodehouse He proposed to teach it a few simple tricks and get it dates on Television.
Phrases: bear date: see BEAR verb1. blind date: see BLIND adjective. double date: see DOUBLE adjective & adverb. out of date old-fashioned; obsolete. sell-by-date: see SELL verb. to date to the present time or moment; until now. up to date: see UP adverb1. up-to-date: see UP adverb1. use-by date: see USE verb.
Comb.: date-cancel verb trans. cancel by a written or stamped date; date-letter a letter stamped on gold or silver plate, pottery, etc., denoting the year of manufacture; date-line (a) an internationally recognized line from the north to the south pole, partly along meridian 180 degrees from Greenwich, east and west of which the date differs; (b) a line in a newspaper at the head of a dispatch, special article, etc., giving the date (and usu. place) of Writing; date-lined adjective (of an article etc.) having a (specified) date-line; date-mark a mark showing the date; spec. = date-letter above; date rape: of a girl or woman by a person she is Dating or with whom she is on a date; date-stamp noun & verb (a) noun (the impression made by) an adjustable rubber stamp etc. used to record the date of delivery, receipt, etc., of a letter, parcel, bill, etc.; (b) verb trans. mark with a date-stamp.