UNPKG

word-vault

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A lightweight JavaScript package for English word definitions and collections.

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{ "term": "buffer", "partOfSpeech": "noun", "ox5000": true, "cefr": "c1", "definitions": [ { "senseNumber": 1, "definition": "a thing or person that reduces a shock or protects somebody/something against difficulties", "sensetop": "buffer against somethingbuffer between A and B", "cefr": "c1", "examples": [ { "text": "Support from family and friends acts as a buffer against stress.", "contextForm": "buffer against something" }, { "text": "She often had to act as a buffer between father and son.", "contextForm": "buffer between A and B" }, { "text": "The organization acts as a buffer between the management and the union." }, { "text": "a **buffer state** *(= a small country between two powerful states that helps keep peace between them)*" }, { "text": "a **buffer zone** *(= an area of land between two opposing armies or countries)*" }, { "text": "Peacekeepers have been sent in to establish a buffer zone between the rival forces." } ], "collocations": { "verb + buffer": ["act as", "provide", "use something as"], "buffer + noun": ["state", "zone"], "preposition": ["buffer against", "buffer between"] } }, { "senseNumber": 2, "definition": "one of two round metal devices on the front or end of a train, or at the end of a railway track, that reduce the shock if the train hits something", "labels": "(British English)", "cefr": "c2", "examples": [], "topics": ["Transport by bus and train"] }, { "senseNumber": 3, "definition": "an area in a computer’s memory where data can be stored for a short time", "labels": "(computing)", "examples": [] }, { "senseNumber": 4, "definition": "an informal way of referring to an old man that shows that you do not respect him", "labels": "(British English, old-fashioned, informal)", "examples": [] }, { "senseNumber": null, "definition": "if a plan, somebody’s career, etc. hits the buffers, it suddenly stops being successful", "labels": "(informal)", "examples": [ { "text": "The former tennis star’s comeback trail hit the buffers yesterday when she lost in straight sets." } ], "topics": ["Difficulty and failure"] } ], "pronunciations": { "uk": [ { "pronunciation": "/ˈbʌfə(r)/", "audio": "bu/buffer/buffer__gb_1.mp3" } ], "us": [ { "pronunciation": "/ˈbʌfər/", "audio": "bu/buffer/buffer__us_1.mp3" } ] }, "wordOrigin": "noun senses 1 to 2 mid 19th cent.: probably from obsolete buff (verb), imitative of the sound of a blow to a soft body. noun sense 3 mid 18th cent.: probably from obsolete buff (imitative of the sound of a blow to a soft body), or from dialect buff ‘stutter, splutter’ (possibly the same word). In late Middle English buffer had the sense ‘stammerer’." }