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unit
1[ yoo-nit ]
noun
- a single thing or person.
- any group of things or persons regarded as an entity:
They formed a cohesive unit.
- one of the individuals or groups that together constitute a whole; one of the parts or elements into which a whole may be divided or analyzed.
- one of a number of things, organizations, etc., identical or equivalent in function or form:
a rental unit;
a unit of rolling stock.
- any magnitude regarded as an independent whole; a single, indivisible entity.
- Also called dimension. any specified amount of a quantity, as of length, volume, force, momentum, or time, by comparison with which any other quantity of the same kind is measured or estimated.
- the least positive integer; one.
- Also called unit's place.
- (in a mixed number) the position of the first digit to the left of the decimal point.
- (in a whole number) the position of the first digit from the right of the decimal point.
- a machine, part, or system of machines having a specified purpose; apparatus:
a heating unit.
- Education. a division of instruction centering on a single theme.
- Military. an organized body of soldiers, varying in size and constituting a subdivision of a larger body.
- Medicine/Medical.
- the measured amount of a substance necessary to cause a certain effect; a clinical quantity used when a substance cannot be readily isolated in pure form and its activity determined directly.
- the amount necessary to cause a specific effect upon a specific animal or upon animal tissues.
- Mathematics.
- an identity element.
- an element in a group, ring, etc., that possesses an inverse.
Unit.
2abbreviation for
- Unitarian.
Unit.
1abbreviation for
- Unitarian
unit
2/ ˈjuːnɪt /
noun
- a single undivided entity or whole
- any group or individual, esp when regarded as a basic element of a larger whole
- a mechanical part or integrated assembly of parts that performs a subsidiary function
a filter unit
- a complete system, apparatus, or establishment that performs a specific function
a production unit
- a subdivision of a larger military formation
- Also calledunit of measurement A standard amount of a physical quantity, such as length, mass, energy, etc, specified multiples of which are used to express magnitudes of that physical quantity
the second is a unit of time
- the amount of a drug, vaccine, etc, needed to produce a particular effect
- a standard measure used in calculating alcohol intake and its effect
- maths
- usually plural the first position in a place-value counting system, representing a single-digit number
in the decimal system the number 27 has 7 units and 2 tens
- modifier having a value defined as one for the system
unit vector
- Also calledunit set maths logic a set having a single member
- short for home unit
- short for stock unit
- a self-propelled railcar
Other Words From
- inter·unit adjective
- multi·unit adjective
- subunit noun
- super·unit noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of unit1
Word History and Origins
Origin of unit1
Example Sentences
In order to do so, developers would need to include a certain percentage of affordable units — and the property must be near transit or along a major street near jobs and good schools.
She added: “This is essential for us to understand and treat disease, cells are the basic unit of life, if things go wrong, they go wrong with our cells.”
And last month, a woman was jailed for five years after lying about her experience and qualifications to get a job as a senior nurse in a unit for sick and premature babies.
"However, you need training data and computational resources including sufficient graphical processing units which are much-sought after these days," Yakimovich recalls.
“That could delay the creation of those units by years.”
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