mod
/mɒd/ · noun
Meaning
- An unconventionally modern style of fashionable dress originating in England in the 1960s, characterized by ankle-length black trenchcoats and sunglasses.
- A 1960s British person who dressed in such a style and was interested in modernism and the modern music of the time; the opposite of a rocker.
- A modification.
- An end user-created package containing modifications to the look or behaviour of a video game.
- A moderator, for example on a discussion forum.
- A module (file containing a tracker music sequence).
- To modify (an object) from its original condition, typically for the purposes of individualizing and/or enhancing the performance of the object.
- To moderate; to silence or punish (a rule-breaking user) on a forum, especially when done by a moderator.
- One of several ancient Greek scales.
- One of several common scales in modern Western music, one of which corresponds to the modern major scale and one to the natural minor scale.
- A particular means of accomplishing something.
- A particular state of being, or frame of mind.
- The most frequently occurring value in a distribution
- A state of a system that is represented by an eigenfunction of that system.
- Style or fashion; popular trend.
- Not excessive; acting in moderation
- Mediocre
- Average priced; standard-deal
- Not violent or rigorous; temperate; mild; gentle.
- Having an intermediate position between liberal and conservative.
- The base with respect to which a congruence is computed.
- The absolute value of a complex number.
- A coefficient that expresses how much of a certain property is possessed by a certain substance.
- An operator placed between two numbers, to get the remainder of the division of those numbers.
- A festival of Scottish Gaelic song, arts and culture, akin to the Welsh eisteddfod.
Etymology / origin
No prose etymology has been added yet.
No ancestor words have been linked yet.
Related words
Descendant words
No descendant words have been linked yet.