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information
[ in-fer-mey-shuhn ]
noun
- knowledge communicated or received concerning a particular fact or circumstance; news:
information concerning a crime.
Synonyms: advice, intelligence, data
- knowledge gained through study, communication, research, instruction, etc.; factual data:
His wealth of general information is amazing.
- the act or fact of informing.
- an office, station, service, or employee whose function is to provide information to the public:
The ticket seller said to ask information for a timetable.
- Law.
- an official criminal charge presented, usually by the prosecuting officers of the state, without the interposition of a grand jury.
- a criminal charge, made by a public official under oath before a magistrate, of an offense punishable summarily.
- the document containing the depositions of witnesses against one accused of a crime.
- (in information theory) an indication of the number of possible choices of messages, expressible as the value of some monotonic function of the number of choices, usually the logarithm to the base 2.
- Computers.
- important or useful facts obtained as output from a computer by means of processing input data with a program:
Using the input data, we have come up with some significant new information.
- data at any stage of processing (input, output, storage, transmission, etc.).
information
/ ˌɪnfəˈmeɪʃən /
noun
- knowledge acquired through experience or study
- knowledge of specific and timely events or situations; news
- the act of informing or the condition of being informed
- an office, agency, etc, providing information
- ( as modifier )
information service
- a charge or complaint made before justices of the peace, usually on oath, to institute summary criminal proceedings
- a complaint filed on behalf of the Crown, usually by the attorney general
- computing
- the meaning given to data by the way in which it is interpreted
- another word for data
- too much information informal.I don't want to hear any more
Derived Forms
- ˌinforˈmational, adjective
Other Words From
- infor·mation·al adjective
- nonin·for·mation·al adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of information1
Idioms and Phrases
see under gold mine .Synonym Study
Example Sentences
“We are checking the information and at this stage we are unable to verify or refute it.”
As a result of Jaguar's rebrand strategy to tease and drip feed information of its plans, a void has been created, and that has been "filled by opinion", Mr Rolston says.
"There is still more work to be done in terms of correcting the information that was given to us through programs like the 'Just Say No,' campaign and the War on Drugs."
“We intend to vigorously prosecute this case and encourage others to come forward who may have information about additional victims and crimes.”
The regional newspaper Unione Sarda, which has become a clearinghouse of information over the “wind assault,” promotes the "Pratobello law," an initiative to grant territories the power to decide over energy projects.
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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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