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Code Strict Written System Dress Noun Bre Kəʊd

Word code
WordType (noun)
Phonetic BrE / kəʊd / NAmE / koʊd /
Example
  • to break/crack a code (= to understand and read the message)
  • it's written in code.
  • tap your code number into the machine.
  • in the event of the machine not operating correctly, an error code will appear.
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Content

code

(noun)BrE / kəʊd / NAmE / koʊd /
  1. a system of words, letters, numbers or symbols that represent a message or record information secretly or in a shorter form
    • see also area code
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/area-code
    • to break/crack a code (= to understand and read the message)
    • It's written in code.
    • Tap your code number into the machine.
    • In the event of the machine not operating correctly, an error code will appear.
    • = dialling code
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/dialling-code
    • There are three codes for London.
  2. a system of computer programming instructions
    • see also machine code
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/machine-code
  3. a set of moral principles or rules of behaviour that are generally accepted by society or a social group
    • a strict code of conduct
  4. a system of laws or written rules that state how people in an institution or a country should behave
    • see also dress code
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/dress-code
    • the penal code

    Extra Examples

    • He was thrown out for infringing the club’s strict dress code.
    • The code was difficult to crack.
    • The company has drawn up a new disciplinary code.
    • The principal said I had violated the school’s dress code.
    • The profession has a strict code of practice.
    • There is an unwritten code that says ‘Do not date your best friend’s ex’.
    • What’s the area code for Bath?
    • planned changes in the US tax code
    • the Highway Code
    • A long-standing, unwritten code of behaviour governs relations between ministers and civil servants.
    • The Supreme Council adopted a new criminal code.
    • The law includes amendments to the penal code.
    • The school enforces a strict code of conduct.
    • There should be a clear ethical code for researchers working with human subjects.
    • There was a rigid code of honour associated with the cult.
    • Young people unconsciously conform to a dress code but reject any kind of uniform.

    Word Origin

    • Middle English: via Old French from Latin codex, codic- literally ‘block of wood’, later denoting a block split into leaves or tablets for writing on, hence a book. The term originally denoted a systematic collection of statutes made by Justinian or another of the later Roman emperors; compare with sense (5) (mid 18th cent.), the earliest modern sense.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Tags: c

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