/steɪt/
- A condition; a set of circumstances applying at any given time.
“a state of being”
“a state of emergency”
“Relate what Latium was, her ancient Kings : / Declare the paſt, and preſent State of things, / When firſt the Trojan Fleet Auſonia ſought ; / And how the Rivals lov’d, and how they fought.”
- A complete description of a system, consisting of parameters that determine all properties of the system.
“States in which the energy has definite values are called stationary states of a system; they are described by wave functions Ψₙ which are the eigenfunctions of the Hamiltonian operator, i.e. which sa”
- colloquial, singularA mess; disorder; a bad condition or set of circumstances.
“absolute state”
“in a state”
“in a bit of a state”
- The stable condition of a processor during a particular clock cycle.
“In the fetch state, the address of the next instruction is placed on the address bus.”
- The set of all parameters relevant to a computation.
“The state here includes a set containing all names seen so far.”
- The values of all parameters at some point in a computation.
“A debugger can show the state of a program at any breakpoint.”
- The physical property of matter as solid, liquid, gas or plasma.
- obsoleteHighest and stationary condition, as that of maturity between growth and decline, or as that of crisis between the increase and the abating of a disease; height; acme.
- Pomp, ceremony, or dignity.
“in state”
“The President's body will lie in state at the Capitol.”
- Rank; condition; quality.
“And leſned by that ſmall, God I beſeech him, / Thy honor, ſtate, and ſeate, is due to me.”
- Condition of prosperity or grandeur; wealthy or prosperous circumstances; social importance.
“Firſt, in princely behaviour and geſture, teaching him how he ſhould keep of a kind of ſtate, and yet, with a modeſt ſenſe of his misfortunes.”
“Can this imperious lord forget to reign, / Quit all his ſtate, deſcend, and ſerve again ?”
- A chair with a canopy above it, often standing on a dais; a seat of dignity; also, the canopy itself.
“[…]and from the dore / Of that Plutonia Hall, inviſible / Aſcended his high Throne, which under ſtate / Of richeſt texture ſpred, at th’ upper end / Was plac’t in regal luſtre.”
“He invented a way of coming into a Room backwards, which he ſaid ſhew’d more Humility, and leſs Affectation ; where other People ſtood, he ſat ; when he went to Court, he us’d to kick away the State, ”
- obsoleteA great person, a dignitary; a lord or prince.
“We in the name of other Perſean ſtates,
And commons of this mightie Monarchy,
Preſent thee with the Emperiall Diadem.”
“They who to States and Governours of the Commonwealth direct their Speech, High Court of Parlament, or wanting ſuch acceſſe in a private condition, write that which they foreſee may advance the public”
- obsoleteEstate, possession.
“Their parties great, meanes good, the ſeaſon fit, / Their practice cloſe, their faith ſuſpected not, / Their ſtates far off, and they of wary wit : / Who, with large promiſes, ſo wooe the Scot / To ai”
“Your ’State, my Lord, again is yours.”
- A sovereign country or city-state and its government, often used as synonym of the latter.
“Never do anything against conscience even if the state demands it.”
- A political division of a federation retaining a notable degree of autonomy, as in the United States, Mexico, Nigeria, or India.
“His alibi is that he was out of state the night of the murder.”
“The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”
“You do solemnly swear (or affirm, as the case may be) that you will support the constitution of the United States, and the constitution of the state of Connecticut, so long as you continue a citizen t”
- obsoleteA form of government other than a monarchy.
“Well monarchies may own religion’s name, / But ſtates are atheiſts in their very frame.”
- A society larger than a tribe. A society large enough to form a state in the sense of a government.
- An element of the range of the random variables that define a random process.
- The lexical aspect (aktionsart) of verbs or predicates that do not change over time.
“[…]distinctions among states of affairs are reflected to a striking degree in distinctions among Aktionsart types. That is, situations are expressed by state verbs or predicates, events by achievement”
“The most basic Aktionsart distinction is between states and occurrences.”
- A current governing polity, country, city-state, or community.
- often, with-definite-articleThe current governing polity, country, city-state, or community under which the speaker lives.
- transitiveTo declare to be a fact.
“He stated that he was willing to help.”
“Carried somehow, somewhither, for some reason, on these surging floods, were these travelers, of errand not wholly obvious to their fellows, yet of such sort as to call into query alike the nature of ”
“A provision of law may not be construed as requiring a new grant to be awarded to a specified non-Federal Government entity unless that provision of law (1) specifically refers to this subsection; spe”
- transitiveTo make known.
- obsoleteStately.
“The ſhepheardes ſwayne you cannot well ken, / But it be by his pride, from other men: / They looken bigge as Bulles, that bene bate, / And bearen the cragge ſo ſtiffe and ſo ſtate, / As Cocke on his d”
- State University, as the shortened form of a public university name.
“State begins fouling and UCLA misses a couple of front-end free throws on one-and-ones.”
“The Pack’s average seed in the mountain of NCAA tourney predictions out there is 10, and even the most optimistic takes on State’s situation have the team as an eight-seed.”
Formsstates(plural) · states(present, singular, third-person) · stating(participle, present) · stated(participle, past) · stated(past) · more state(comparative) · most state(superlative) · States(plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0