sentinel
Appearance
See also: Sentinel
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]1570s, from Middle French sentinelle, from Old Italian sentinella (perhaps via a notion of "perceive, watch", compare Italian sentire (“to feel, hear, smell”)), from Latin sentiō (“feel, perceive by the senses”). See sense, sentient.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]sentinel (plural sentinels)
- A sentry, watch, or guard.
- 1719 May 6 (Gregorian calendar), [Daniel Defoe], The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, […], London: […] W[illiam] Taylor […], →OCLC:
- They promised faithfully to bear their confinement with patience, and were very thankful that they had such good usage as to have provisions and light left them; for Friday gave them candles (such as we made ourselves) for their comfort; and they did not know but that he stood sentinel over them at the entrance.
- 1849–1861, Thomas Babington Macaulay, chapter 12, in The History of England from the Accession of James the Second, volume (please specify |volume=I to V), London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, →OCLC:
- the sentinels who paced the ramparts
- 1625, Francis [Bacon], “Of Empire”, in The Essayes […], 3rd edition, London: […] Iohn Haviland for Hanna Barret, →OCLC:
- that princes do keep due sentinel
- (obsolete) A private soldier.
- 1789, John Moore, Zeluco, Valancourt, published 2008, page 33:
- “I will not permit the poorest centinel to be treated with injustice.”
- (computer science) A unique value recognised by a computer program for processing in a special way, or marking the end of a set of data.
- The <xmp> tag is a sentinel that suspends web-page processing and displays the subsequent text literally
- 2016, Jake VanderPlas, Python Data Science Handbook, page 120:
- […] a sentinel value that indicates a missing entry.
- A sentinel crab.
- (attributive, medicine, epidemiology) A sign of a health risk (e.g. a disease, an adverse effect).
- sentinel animals can be used to explore endemic diseases.
- (Can we verify( ) this sense?) (figuratively) Someone who is hardworking and dutiful.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]A sentry or guard
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a unique phrase of characters
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Verb
[edit]sentinel (third-person singular simple present sentinels, present participle (US) sentineling or (UK) sentinelling, simple past and past participle (US) sentineled or (UK) sentinelled)
- (transitive) To watch over as a guard.
- He sentineled the north wall.
- (transitive) To post a guard for.
- He sentineled the north wall with just one man.
- 1873, Harper's New Monthly Magazine, volume 46, page 562:
- The old-fashioned stoop, with its suggestive benches on either side, lay solitary and silent in the moonlight; the garden path, weedily overgrown since father's death, and sentineled here and there with ragged hollyhock, lay quiet and dew-laden […]
Translations
[edit]To watch over something as a guard
Anagrams
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