Ops
[ops] /ɒps/
noun
1.
the ancient Roman goddess of plenty, and the wife of Saturn and mother of Jupiter: identified with the Greek goddess Rhea.
1.
Office of Price Stabilization.
[op] /ɒp/
noun
1.
.
/ɒps/
noun
1.
the Roman goddess of abundance and fertility, wife of Saturn Greek counterpart Rhea
abbreviation
1.
(military) observation post
2.
Ordo Praedicatorum (the Dominicans)
3.
organophosphate
noun
[fr operator or operative]
adjective
Other people’s: OP. Other people’s money
[1901+; perhaps a translation of Yiddish yenems]
1. On-line Process Synthesizer.
2. Official Production System.
3. Oracle Parallel Server.
(2003-04-05)
Ordered to be Printed Senate
Ophthalmic Photographers’ Society
1.
operation
2.
operative
3.
operator
4.
opportunity
1.
operation
2.
op[tical] art
1.
observation post
2.
operate (shortwave transmission)
3.
operator (shortwave transmission)
4.
Order of Preachers
5.
out of print
6.
outpatient
Read Also:
- Ops5
language A programming language for rule-based production systems. A rule consists of pre-condition(s) and a resulting action. The system checks its working memory to see if there are rules whose pre-conditions are satisfied, if so, the action in one selected satisfied rule is executed. There is a public domain implementation of an OPS5 interpreter written […]
- Ops83
A commercial version of OPS5.
- Op-shop
noun 1. (Austral & NZ, informal) short for opportunity shop
- Opsimath
/ˈɒpsɪˌmæθ/ noun 1. a person who learns late in life noun a person who becomes a student or learner late in life Word Origin Greek ‘late in learning’
- Opsimathy
n. 1650s, from Greek opsimathia “learning late in life,” from opse “late” (related to opiso “backward,” opisthen “behind”) + manthanein “to learn” (see mathematic). Related: Opsimath (n.).