office
Reikšmė
-
- A ceremonial duty or service
- A ceremonial duty or service
- A ceremonial duty or service
- A ceremonial duty or service
- A ceremonial duty or service
- A ceremonial duty or service
- (obsolete) A ceremonial duty or service
- A position of responsibility.
- Official position, particularly high employment within government; tenure in such a position.
- A duty, particularly owing to one's position or station; a charge, trust, or role; (obsolete, rare) moral duty.
- Function: anything typically done by or expected of something.
- A service, a kindness.
- (slang) Inside information.
- A room, set of rooms, or building used for non-manual work
- A room, set of rooms, or building used for non-manual work
- A room, set of rooms, or building used for non-manual work
- A room, set of rooms, or building used for non-manual work, particularly
- The staff of such places.
- The administrative departments housed in such places
- The administrative departments housed in such places
- The administrative departments housed in such places
- The administrative departments housed in such places, particularly
- The parts of a house or estate devoted to manual work and storage, as the kitchen, scullery, laundry, stables, etc., particularly (euphemistic, dated) a house or estate's facilities for urination and defecation: outhouses or lavatories.
- Clipping of inquest of office
- (obsolete) A piece of land used for hunting; the area of land overseen by a gamekeeper.
- (obsolete,slang) A hangout: a place where one is normally found.
- (slang) A plane's cockpit, particularly an observer's cockpit.
- A collection of business software typically including a word processor and spreadsheet and slideshow programs.
- (obsolete) An official or group of officials; (figuratively) a personification of officeholders.
- (obsolete) A bodily function, (particularly) urination and defecation; an act of urination or defecation.
- (obsolete) The performance of a duty; an instance of performing a duty.
Dažnis
Brūkšnelis kaip
of‧fice
Tariama kaip (IPA)
/ˈɒfɪs/
Etimologija
From Middle English office, from Old French office, from Latin officium (“personal, official, or moral duty; official position; function; ceremony, esp. last rites”), contracted from opificium (“construction: the act of building or the thing built”), from opifex (“doer of work, craftsman”) + -ium (“-y: forming actions”), from op- (“base of opus: work”) + -i- (“connective”) + -fex (“combining form of facere: to do, to make”). The use in reference to office software is a genericization of various proprietary program suites, such as Microsoft Office.
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