an opening in the wall of a building, the side of a vehicle, etc., for the admission of air or light, or both, commonly fitted with a frame in which are set movable sashes containing panes of glass.
such an opening with the frame, sashes, and panes of glass, or any other device, by which it is closed.
the frame, sashes, and panes of glass, or the like, intended to fit such an opening: Finally the builders put in the windows.
a windowpane.
anything likened to a window in appearance or function, as a transparent section in an envelope, displaying the address.
a period of time regarded as highly favorable for initiating or completing something: Investors have a window of perhaps six months before interest rates rise.
Military. chaff1 (def. 5).
Geology. fenster.
Pharmacology. the drug dosage range that results in a therapeutic effect, a lower dose being insufficient and a higher dose being toxic.
Aerospace.
launch window.
a specific area at the outer limits of the earth's atmosphere through which a spacecraft must reenter to arrive safely at its planned destination.
Computers. a section of a display screen that can be created for viewing information from another part of a file or from another file: The split screen feature enables a user to create two or more windows.
verb (used with object)
to furnish with a window or windows.
Obsolete. to display or put in a window.
Origin of window
1175–1225; Middle English windoge, windowe<Old Norse vindauga, equivalent to vindrwind1 + augaeye
If you can’t get outside that often, looking out a window regularly should help.
Healthy screen time is one challenge of distance learning|Kathryn Hulick|September 11, 2020|Science News For Students
Generally, advertisers’ cancelation amounts increased from 30% to 50%, and the cancelation windows shrunk from 45 to 60 days before a quarter’s start to 30 to 45 days.
‘There wasn’t a huge shift’: TV upfront market did not undergo expected overhaul this year|Tim Peterson|September 9, 2020|Digiday
Closed stores and empty windows result in emptier sidewalks and streets.
Myths and Shame Shouldn’t Guide Cannabis Regulations|John Bertsch|September 8, 2020|Voice of San Diego
It took a few gummy bites of the curtain material, allowing me to open the window over its head.
Why last week’s great tech sell-off should make investors wary|Bernhard Warner|September 8, 2020|Fortune
On May 25, he threw a chair through a window at his brother’s house and drove off, hitting several parked vehicles.
Longtime Sheriff’s Employee Contradicts Official Account of Jail Death|Kelly Davis|September 3, 2020|Voice of San Diego
The interior video shows the gunman firing the shot through the window.
Shot Down During the NYPD Slowdown|Michael Daly|January 7, 2015|DAILY BEAST
I fall back into a dream and then suddenly there is a tapping on the window just above my bed.
The Story Behind Lee Marvin’s Liberty Valance Smile|Robert Ward|January 3, 2015|DAILY BEAST
As it was, The Affair ended its first season last night with me contemplating hurling my television out of the window.
What On Earth Is ‘The Affair’ About? Season One’s Baffling Finale|Tim Teeman|December 22, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The younger man rolled down his window to receive the approaching Williams “to see what he wanted.”
Exposed: The Gay-Bashing Pastor’s Same-Sex Assault|M.L. Nestel|December 21, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Her son peeked out the window and told me his mother had left Havana for La Lisa to visit a dying relative.
The Life and Hard Times Of The Family A Cuban Defector Left Behind|Brin-Jonathan Butler|December 19, 2014|DAILY BEAST
After the first moment she did not look at Julian; she looked away from him out of the window.
The Second Fiddle|Phyllis Bottome
She saw Mrs. Leslie coming to the window with her friend, and nerved herself for the ordeal.
Guy Kenmore's Wife and The Rose and the Lily|Mrs. Alex McVeigh Miller
Across the street he saw a window with a display of camping equipment, portable stoves, boots, rifles.
It Could Be Anything|John Keith Laumer
The boys, and those in the room, caught a glimpse of the old miner as he hurried past the window after the gambler.
Two Boy Gold Miners|Frank V. Webster
Then without further hesitation I leaped out of bed and indignantly rushed to the window, but only on opening it to find him gone.
Brownsmith's Boy|George Manville Fenn
British Dictionary definitions for window
window
/ (ˈwɪndəʊ) /
noun
a light framework, made of timber, metal, or plastic, that contains glass or glazed opening frames and is placed in a wall or roof to let in light or air or to see throughRelated adjective: fenestral
an opening in the wall or roof of a building that is provided to let in light or air or to see through
See windowpane
the display space in and directly behind a shop windowthe dress in the window
any opening or structure resembling a window in function or appearance, such as the transparent area of an envelope revealing an address within
an opportunity to see or understand something usually unseena window on the workings of Parliament
a period of unbooked time in a diary, schedule, etc
short for launch window, weather window
physicsa region of the spectrum in which a medium transmits electromagnetic radiationSee also radio window
computingan area of a VDU display that may be manipulated separately from the rest of the display area; typically different files can be displayed simultaneously in different overlapping windows
(modifier)of or relating to a window or windowsa window ledge
out of the windowinformaldispensed with; disregarded
verb
(tr)to furnish with or as if with windows
Word Origin for window
C13: from Old Norse vindauga, from vindrwind1 + augaeye1