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content
1[ kon-tent ]
noun
- Usually contents.
- something that is contained:
the contents of a box.
- the subjects or topics covered in a book or document.
- the chapters or other formal divisions of a book or document:
a table of contents.
- something that is to be expressed through some medium, as speech, writing, or any of various arts:
a poetic form adequate to a poetic content.
- significance or profundity; meaning:
a clever play that lacks content.
- substantive information or creative material viewed in contrast to its actual or potential manner of presentation:
publishers, record companies, and other content providers; a flashy website, but without much content.
- that which may be perceived in something:
the latent versus the manifest content of a dream.
- Philosophy, Logic. the sum of the attributes or notions comprised in a given conception; the substance or matter of cognition.
- power of containing; holding capacity:
The bowl's content is three quarts.
- volume, area, or extent; size.
- the amount contained.
- Linguistics. the system of meanings or semantic values specific to a language ( expression ).
- Mathematics. the greatest common divisor of all the coefficients of a given polynomial. Compare primitive polynomial.
- any abstraction of the concept of length, area, or volume.
content
2[ kuhn-tent ]
adjective
- satisfied with what one is or has; not wanting more or anything else.
- British. agreeing; assenting.
- Archaic. willing.
verb (used with object)
- to make content:
These things content me.
Antonyms: dissatisfy
noun
- the state or feeling of being contented; satisfaction; contentment:
His content was threatened.
- (in the British House of Lords) an affirmative vote or voter.
content
1/ ˈkɒntɛnt /
noun
- often plural everything that is inside a container
the contents of a box
- usually plural
- the chapters or divisions of a book
- a list, printed at the front of a book, of chapters or divisions together with the number of the first page of each
- the meaning or significance of a poem, painting, or other work of art, as distinguished from its style or form
- all that is contained or dealt with in a discussion, piece of writing, etc; substance
- the capacity or size of a thing
- the proportion of a substance contained in an alloy, mixture, etc
the lead content of petrol
content
2/ kənˈtɛnt /
adjective
- mentally or emotionally satisfied with things as they are
- assenting to or willing to accept circumstances, a proposed course of action, etc
verb
- tr to make (oneself or another person) content or satisfied
to content oneself with property
noun
- peace of mind; mental or emotional satisfaction
interjection
- (in the House of Lords) a formal expression of assent, as opposed to the expression not content
Derived Forms
- conˈtently, adverb
- conˈtentment, noun
Other Words From
- con·tent·a·ble adjective
- con·tent·ly adverb
- con·tent·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of content1
Origin of content2
Idioms and Phrases
see to one's heart's content .Synonym Study
Example Sentences
In the video from 2022, Trump says he would change Section 230, a law that shields platforms from liability for user-generated content.
However, consumers and creators of queer content have found ways to thrive online through coded language or other censorship workarounds, according to Wang Shuaishuai, a lecturer at the University of Manchester who studies queer representation in Chinese media.
“Queer content creators can always find new ways of expression,” said Wang, who has interviewed Douyin content moderators in his research.
“For internet and culture regulators, they don’t know how to moderate this type of content either…. Sometimes they experiment with these censorship rules themselves.”
The pair like to search other queer content for coded hashtags to use on their own account, such as “lala,” which is slang for “lesbian,” or the Chinese words for “roommates” or “besties.”
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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