target | ©
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1. subst. A butt or mark to shoot at, as for practice, or to test the accuracy of a firearm, or the force of a projectile. | |
Take careful aim at the target. | |
2. subst. A goal or objective. | |
They have a target to finish the project by November. | |
3. subst. A kind of small shield or buckler, used as a defensive weapon in war. | |
4. subst. (obsolete) A shield resembling the Roman scutum, larger than the modern buckler. | |
5. subst. (heraldry) A bearing representing a buckler. | |
6. subst. (sports) The pattern or arrangement of a series of hits made by a marksman on a butt or mark. | |
He made a good target. | |
7. subst. (surveying) The sliding crosspiece, or vane, on a leveling staff. | |
8. subst. (rail transport) A conspicuous disk attached to a switch lever to show its position, or for use as a signal. | |
9. subst. (cricket) the number of runs that the side batting last needs to score in the final innings in order to win | |
10. subst. (linguistics) The tenor of a metaphor. | |
11. subst. (translation studies) The translated version of a document, or the language into which translation occurs. | |
Do you charge by source or target? | |
12. subst. A person (or group of people) that a person or organization is trying to employ or to have as a customer, audience etc. | |
13. subst. (dated) A thin cut; a slice; specifically, of lamb, a piece consisting of the neck and breast joints. | |
14. subst. (Scotland, obsolete) A tassel or pendant. | |
15. subst. (Scotland, obsolete) A shred; a tatter. | |
16. v. To aim something, especially a weapon, at (a target). | |
17. v. (transitive, figuratively) To aim for as an audience or demographic. | |
The advertising campaign targeted older women. | |
18. v. (transitive, computing) To produce code suitable for. | |
This cross-platform compiler can target any of several processors. | |