checkpoint
See also: Checkpoint
English
editEtymology
editPronunciation
editNoun
editcheckpoint (plural checkpoints)
- A point or place where a check is performed, especially a point along a road or on a frontier where travellers are stopped for inspection
- The travellers were stopped at the checkpoint.
- 2014, Paul Salopek, Blessed. Cursed. Claimed., National Geographic (December 2014)[1]
- A few days later I ford the Jordan River on a bus: Foot travel across Allenby Bridge checkpoint is strictly prohibited.
- (computing) A situation, often represented by a point in time, at which the state of a database system is known to be valid, and to which it can be returned in the event of a crisis by using a combination of backups and logs; the data stored at this event.
- After the crash, we rolled back the database to the last checkpoint.
- (video games) A predetermined point in a map, level or scenario that the player may resume from if they die or restart from if they choose to.
- You can't finish the race if you haven't passed all of the checkpoints on the track.
- 2010 March 8, 20:40, in Chuck Versus the Beard (Chuck), season 3, episode 9, spoken by Chuck Bartowski (Zachary Levi):
- This is not a videogame, this is real life! People get hurt! There is no restart from last checkpoint.
Derived terms
editTranslations
editpoint along a road or on a frontier
|
computing
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video games
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Verb
editcheckpoint (third-person singular simple present checkpoints, present participle checkpointing, simple past and past participle checkpointed)
- To set a checkpoint.
Swedish
editNoun
editcheckpoint c
Declension
editDeclension of checkpoint
nominative | genitive | ||
---|---|---|---|
singular | indefinite | checkpoint | checkpoints |
definite | checkpointen | checkpointens | |
plural | indefinite | checkpointar | checkpointars |
definite | checkpointarna | checkpointarnas |