sample
Is it a Scrabble word? See definition, points, and words you can make.
Is sample a Scrabble word?
Word Games
- Scrabble US/Canada (OTCWL) Yes
- Scrabble UK (SOWPODS) Yes
- Wordle No
- Words With Friends Yes
What is the meaning of sample?
Definition
noun (English)
1. (statistics) A subset or portion of a population that is systematically selected for measurement, observation, or questioning, with the objective of generating statistical information that accurately reflects the characteristics of the entire population.Examples: "Large samples are generally more reliable than small samples due to having less variability."; "It is interesting to find that, with the exception of a few imperfectly-observed South Sea Islanders, and whose actual numbers, if the measurements are correct, are very few, the English professional classes head the long list [in average height], and that the Anglo-Saxon race takes the chief place in it among the civilised communities, although it is possible it might stand second to the Scandinavian countries if a fair sample of their population were obtained."
2. (cooking) A small quantity of food for tasting, typically given away for free.
3. (business) A small piece of some goods, for determining quality, colour, etc., typically given away for free.
4. (music) Gratuitous borrowing of easily recognised phases (or moments) from other music (or movies) in a recording.Examples: "Jeffrey conceives a fascination with nightclub singer Dorothy Vallens (Isabella Rossellini) who sings Blue Velvet, while her abusive, misogynist sugar-daddy Frank (Dennis Hopper) watches, caressing a sample of this same material."
5. (obsolete) Example; pattern.Examples: "Thus he concludes, and euery hardie knight / His ſample follow’d, and his brethren twaine, / The other Princes put on harneſſe light, / As footmen vſe."; "[The King] Liu’d in Court / (Which rare it is to do) moſt prais’d, moſt lou’d, / A ſample to the yongeſt."obsolete
verb (English)
1. (transitive) To take or to test a sample or samples of.Examples: "They had just finished their breakfast, and the sight of the remains of it almost overpowered me. I could hardly keep my wits together in the presence of that food, but as I was not asked to sample it, I had to bear my trouble as best I could."; "Mok was enjoying himself very much. It was not often that he had such an opportunity to sample the delights of Paris. His young master, Ralph, had given him strict orders never to go out at night, or in his leisure hours, unless accompanied by Cheditafa."; "It is certainly my personal favourite, for it was by way of Hardwick's great Doric arch that I first sampled the roar and clatter of London streets, the trip being a boyhood reward for achieving (unexpected) success in a school examination!"transitive
2. (transitive, signal processing) To reduce a continuous signal (such as a sound wave) to a discrete signal.transitive
3. (music, transitive) To reuse a portion of (an existing sound recording) in a new piece of music.Examples: "To address this novel legal quandary, one legal treatise on copyright has developed the concept of fragmented literal similarity, a method of determining whether a sample-based work is substantially similar to the source it sampled. The name reflects the exactness of the similarity between the snippet of a track that is sampled and the sampled copy of that snippet."transitive
4. (transitive, computer graphics) To make or show something similar to a sample.Examples: "It means that a larger image field can be sampled from a lower resolution copy without much loss in comparative data, only the number of data points to be manipulated."transitive
noun (English)
1. (emergency medicine) Initialism of signs and symptoms, allergies, medications, past pertinent history, last oral intake, events leading to present illness.abbreviationalt-ofinitialismuncountable
Definition source: Wiktionary